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Proteomic analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown on glucose or glycerol By HannahDHoang AthesissubmittedtoVictoriaUniversityofWellington inthefulfillmentofthe requirementsforthedegreeof MasterofScience inCellandMolecularBioscience 2013 Acknowledgements This has been quite an adventure and I am grateful to all of the amazing people who have supported me throughout the course of this project. Firstly, I would like to thank my supervisor, Dr Bill Jordan for this research opportunity. Thank you for your patience, guidance, support, and music suggestions. I have had a wonderful time learning about yeast proteomics. A special thanks to some pretty amazing ‘proteomicists’. Dr Pisana Rawson, thank you for taking time to teach me 2DE, it was cool to learn from the best. Dr Jonathan Dunne, thank you for your help on mass spectrometry (and formatting). A big thanks to Sarah Cordiner, you’re an awesome lab partner. Danyl McLauchlan, thank you for helping out with anything related to bioinformatics. To Dr Paul Atkinson and the chemical genetics group, thank you for gifting BY4741 and allowing me to work in your chemical genetics lab. It has been a real treat having a second lab family. I would also like to acknowledge the fellow students, past and present, who I have come to know, in particular, Ploi Yibmantasiri, Janice Cheng, Nathaniel Dasaym, Bede Busby, Peter Birchirm, Katie Zeier, and Dr Christine Stockholm. Thank you for sharing your time and friendship. Lastly, to my family, you have been such a great support group. Thank you all so much!!! iii Abstract The goal of this research was to use two-dimensional electrophoresis to examine changes in abundance of enzymes of the glycolytic pathway in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown on carbon sources that support either fermentation to ethanol or oxidative metabolism. Large-scale profiling of protein abundances (expression proteomics) often detects changes in protein abundance between physiological states. Such changes in enzyme abundance are often interpreted as evidence of metabolic change although most textbooks emphasise control of enzyme activities not enzyme amount. Two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2DDIGE) was therefore used to examine differences in protein abundance between S. cerevisiae strain BY4741 grown on either glucose (fermentation) or glycerol. Growth on 2% glucose, but not on glycerol, was accompanied by extensive production of ethanol. Doubling times for growth were 2 h 5 min in glucose and 9 h 41 min in glycerol. Conditions for extraction and two-dimensional electrophoresis of proteins were established. One hundred and seventy nine proteins were identified by MALDI mass spectrometry of tryptic digests of protein spots excised from Coomassie stained gels. All of the enzymes for conversion of glucose to ethanol, except for the second enzyme of glycolysis phosphoglucose isomerase, were identified using twodimensional electrophoresis of 100 µg of protein from cells grown on 2% glucose. Identification of proteins excised from the DIGE gels was more challenging, partly because of the lower amount of protein. Eight of the proteins that showed statistically significant differences in abundance (≥ 2-fold, p ≤ 0.01) between glucose and glycerol were identified by mass spectrometry of proteins excised from the 2DDIGE gels, and a further 18 varying proteins were matched to proteins identified from the Coomassie stained gels. Of these total 26 identified or matched proteins, subunits of five of the enzymes for conversion of glucose to ethanol were more abundant from the fermentative cells grown on glucose. The more abundant glycolytic enzymes were phosphofructokinase 2, fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase, triosephosphate isomerase and enolase, plus pyruvate decarboxylase that was required for conversion of the glycolytic product pyruvate to acetaldehyde. The iv alcohol dehydrogenases Adh1 and Adh4 that convert acetaldehyde to ethanol were detected but did not vary significantly between growth on glucose or glycerol. The results confirmed that in this case changes in abundance of some enzymes were consistent with the altered metabolic output. Future studies should examine whether changes in the abundance and activity of these enzymes are responsible for the differences in metabolism. v Abbreviations 1D One-dimensional 2D-DIGE Two-dimensional-differential in gel electrophoresis 2DE Two-dimensional electrophoresis ACN Acetonitrile CBB G-250 Coomassie Brilliant Blue G-250 CHAPS 3-[(3-Cholamidopropyl)dimethylamonio]-1-propanesulfonate CHCA -Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid DIGE Differential in gel electrophoresis DTT Dithiothreitol GE Gel Electrophoresis IAA Iodoacetamide IEF Isoelectric focusing IPG Immobilized pH gradient MALDI Matrix assisted laser desorption ionisation MS Mass Spectrometry pI Isoelectric point PMF Peptide mass fingerprinting SDS Sodium dodecyl sulphate TFA Trifluoroacetic acid Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane vi Table of Contents Acknowledgements .............................................................................................................. iii Abstract ................................................................................................................................... iv Abbreviations ........................................................................................................................ vi List of Figures .......................................................................................................................... x List of Tables ........................................................................................................................ xii 1. Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Proteomics .................................................................................................................. 1 1.2. Gel-based proteomics ............................................................................................... 1 1.2.1. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis ............................................................. 1 1.2.2. Difference gel electrophoresis .......................................................................... 2 1.3. Gel-free proteomics................................................................................................... 4 1.4. Protein identification ................................................................................................ 5 1.5. Saccharomyces cerevisiae ............................................................................................. 6 1.5.1. Carbohydrate metabolism in S. cerevisiae ....................................................... 6 1.6. Glycolysis and fermentation ................................................................................... 8 1.6.1. Glycolysis ............................................................................................................ 8 1.6.2. Fermentation ...................................................................................................... 9 1.7. Glycerol metabolism and gluconeogenesis ......................................................... 12 1.7.1. Glycerol metabolism ....................................................................................... 13 1.7.2. Gluconeogenesis .............................................................................................. 13 1.8. Regulation of glucose metabolism........................................................................ 13 1.8.1. Snf3-Rgt2 pathway .......................................................................................... 14 1.8.2. Mig1-Snf1 pathway ......................................................................................... 14 1.9. Transcriptomic analysis of carbon substrate metabolism ................................. 17 1.10. Proteomic analysis .............................................................................................. 17 1.11. Goal of this research............................................................................................ 22 vii 2. Methods ......................................................................................................................... 24 2.1. Yeast strains and storage ....................................................................................... 24 2.2. Comparative growth experiments ....................................................................... 24 2.3. Growth conditions.................................................................................................. 24 2.4. Growth Curves ....................................................................................................... 25 2.5. Harvesting yeast cultures ...................................................................................... 25 2.6. Protein extraction from cells ................................................................................. 26 2.7. One-dimensional SDS PAGE ................................................................................ 26 2.8. Gel fixing, staining and scanning ......................................................................... 27 2.9. Protein concentration ............................................................................................. 27 2.10. Protein precipitation ........................................................................................... 28 2.11. Two-Dimensional Electrophoresis ................................................................... 28 2.11.1. First dimension ............................................................................................ 28 2.11.2. Sample preparation for passive rehydration ........................................... 28 2.11.3. Sample preparation for cup loading ......................................................... 28 2.11.4. Isoelectric focusing using a Multiphor II system .................................... 29 2.11.5. Second dimension - SDS PAGE ................................................................. 29 2.12. Protein spot picking, destaining of protein spots and trypsin digestion ... 30 2.13. Preparation of samples for MALDI MS/MS .................................................. 30 2.14. MALDI TOF/TOF MS........................................................................................ 30 2.15. Protein identification .......................................................................................... 31 2.16. Gene Ontology .................................................................................................... 32 2.17. Spectrophotometric assays ................................................................................ 32 2.17.1. Glucose assay ............................................................................................... 32 2.17.2. Ethanol assay................................................................................................ 32 2.18. Differential in Gel Electrophoresis (DIGE) ..................................................... 32 2.19. Fluorescent scanning .......................................................................................... 33 2.20. Preparation of gel images for DeCyderTM analysis........................................ 34 2.21. Data analysis using DecyderTM software ........................................................ 34 viii 3. Results............................................................................................................................. 36 3.1. Growth analysis ...................................................................................................... 36 3.2. Extraction protocols and optimization of separation techniques for 2D analysis of a proteome ............................................................................................ 39 3.2.1. Protein extraction ............................................................................................. 39 3.2.2. Separation of yeast proteins by 2DE using different pH ranges on 7 cm gels ..................................................................................................................... 40 3.2.3. Optimization of 2D gels .................................................................................. 41 3.3. Protein identification .............................................................................................. 43 3.3.1. 2D analysis of pI 4-7 proteins ......................................................................... 43 3.3.2. 2D analysis of pI 6-11 proteins ....................................................................... 80 3.4. Gene ontology ....................................................................................................... 106 3.5. Measurement of glucose use and ethanol production .................................... 111 3.6. Comparative proteomics...................................................................................... 112 3.6.1. 4. Growth on glucose (D) or glycerol (G) ....................................................... 112 Discussion .................................................................................................................... 131 4.1. Proteins identified by MALDI MS ...................................................................... 131 4.2. Carbohydrate and ethanol metabolism ............................................................. 133 4.3. Effect of growth on glucose or glycerol ............................................................. 134 4.4. Changes associated with carbohydrate metabolism........................................ 139 4.5. Conclusions and future directions ..................................................................... 140 5. References .................................................................................................................... 141 ix List of Figures Figure 1 - Summary of the DIGE labeling process. ........................................................... 4 Figure 2 - A simplified diagram of glucose metabolism in S. cerevisiae. ......................... 7 Figure 3 - Proteins and metabolites involved in glycolysis. ............................................. 8 Figure 4 - Proteins and metabolites involved in glycerol metabolism, gluconeogenesis/ glycolysis. .............................................................................. 12 Figure 5 - The induction and repression of genes involved in the Snf3-Rgt2 (left) and Mig1-Snf1 (right) pathways of S. cerevisiae. ...................................................... 16 Figure 6 - Proteomic analysis of S. cerevisiae grown in glucose (dextrose) or glycerol based media by Stobaugh et al. (2013). ............................................................. 22 Figure 7 - Growth conditions of BY4741 for the analysis of fermentative and oxidative metabolism. .......................................................................................... 25 Figure 8 - Growth of BY4741 in 2% glucose (top) or 3% glycerol (bottom) and SC media. ..................................................................................................................... 37 Figure 9 - Log10 growth curves of BY4747 in 2% glucose (top) or 3% glycerol (bottom) and SC media. ....................................................................................................... 38 Figure 10 - Comparison of protein extraction methods analyzed by 1D SDS PAGE. ................................................................................................................................. 39 Figure 11 - Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis using three different 7 cm gradients for IEF. .................................................................................................................... 40 Figure 12 - Optimization of IEF. The experiment compared precipitated (left) against non-precipitated (right) protein samples. ......................................................... 42 Figure 13 - The 2D gel image of the protein profile of S. cerevisiae BY4741 separated on a pH 4-7 linear gradient (horizontal axis).................................................... 44 Figure 14 - The 2DE image representing the protein (100 µg) profile of BY4741 separated on a pH 6-11 gradient. ....................................................................... 81 x Figure 15 - Gene ontology annotations of the functions of protein identified from the reference protein maps (Figure 13 and Figure 14). ........................................ 108 Figure 16 - Two-dimensional gel images of BY4741 proteins (100 µg) separated on pH 4-7 (Figure 13, top) or pH 6-11 (Figure 14, bottom) IPG strips. .................. 110 Figure 17 - Two-dimensional images of the DIGE experiment portraying the differences in protein abundance between BY4741 cells grown in glucose (red) and glycerol (blue). .................................................................................... 113 Figure 18 - Comparative gene ontology annotations of the functions between proteins identified for the reference protein map (red) and proteins identified from the glucose vs. glycerol DIGE experiment (blue). ............ 117 Figure 19 - Identified proteins (red box) involved in glucose and glycerol metabolism. ........................................................................................................ 118 Figure 20 - Coomassie stained 2D-DIGE gel of the glucose vs. glycerol experiment. ................................................................................................................................ 119 Figure 21 - Proteins involved in glucose and glycerol metabolism. ............................ 138 xi List of Tables Table 1 - The five S. cerevisiae Adh isoforms involved in ethanol metabolism. ........... 11 Table 2 - Settings of the Multiphor II system for isoelectric focusing using pH 3-11 NL, 4-7 or 6-11 IPG strips. ................................................................................... 29 Table 3 - The DIGE labeling design for the comparison of glucose (D) and glycerol (G) grown cells. ................................................................................................... 33 Table 4 - Excitation wavelengths for each Cy dye and the type of emission filter used for each wavelength. ............................................................................................ 34 Table 5 - Summary of identified BY4741 proteins by MALDI mass spectrometry and separated by 2DE using a pH 4-7 gradient. ...................................................... 45 Table 6 - A summary of identified BY4741 proteins separated on a 6-11 pH gradient. ................................................................................................................................. 82 Table 7 - Identified proteins from the reference protein map (Table 5 and Table 6) that were involved in central carbohydrate metabolism (Figure 15). ......... 109 Table 8 - Glucose consumption and ethanol production of 0.2% (low), 0.5% (medium) and 2% (high) glucose grown yeast cells (A) and 3% glycerol vs. 2% glucose grown cells (B). .................................................................................................. 111 Table 9 - Proteins identified from the glucose versus glycerol grown DIGE experiment (p ≤ 0.01).. ........................................................................................ 114 Table 10 - Possible protein identifications for the glucose vs. glycerol DIGE experiment. ........................................................................................................ 115 Table 11 - Proteins identified from the simplified glucose vs. glycerol grown DIGE experiment. ........................................................................................................ 120 Table 12 - Components of complex V of the electron transport chain. ....................... 132 Table 13 - The twenty-six varying proteins associated with growth on glucose. .... 136 xii 1. Introduction The goal of this project was to use two-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE)-based proteomics to examine changes in protein abundance between fermentative and oxidative metabolism in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Metabolic pathways can be regulated by changing enzyme activities and enzyme amounts. Many proteomic studies, including examination of metabolic change, assume that change in enzyme abundance is related to change in metabolic output. Although this is sometimes the case (Rawson et al., 2012) many enzymes are regulated by substrates, products, allosteric effectors or post-translational modification independent of enzyme amount. This project therefore uses proteomics to investigate potential differences in amount of enzymes that affect carbohydrate metabolism and ethanol synthesis under conditions when either ethanol production or oxidative metabolism predominates. 1.1. Proteomics Proteomics is a set of techniques that can be used to profile the protein content of biological samples (Pham & Wright, 2007). Of particular interest for this project is quantitative proteomics, the ability to compare protein profiles under different conditions. Proteomic workflows can be simplified into the separation of complex protein mixtures coupled to protein identification. Separation of proteins can be divided into gel-based and gel-free techniques. Both have advantages and disadvantages as discussed later. Gel-based analysis by 2DE is used in this project. Protein identification is now commonly done by mass spectrometry with matching of sequence-based peptide masses to sequence databases. 1.2. Gel‐basedproteomics 1.2.1. Two‐dimensionalgelelectrophoresis In 1975 Patrick O’Farrell and Joachim Klose independently developed 2DE (Klose, 1975; O'Farrell, 1975). This technique uses two sequential episodes of protein separation. In the first phase of separation, proteins migrate to their pI using isoelectric focusing (IEF). The second dimension separates focused proteins according to their molecular mass using sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The 2DE method is transformed by coupling pre1 electrophoretic labeling of protein samples with fluorescent Cy dyes allowing quantitative analysis of multiple sample sets (Unlu et al. (1997). Isoelectric focusing (IEF) separates protein mixtures by applying an electric field to a pH gradient (Klose, 1975; O'Farrell, 1975). Proteins migrate to their isoelectric point where they are no longer charged. As they are amphoteric molecules their overall charge is determined by their side chains in that environment. Thus a protein with an overall positive charge would migrate towards the cathode and in a contrasting situation a protein with a net negative charge would migrate towards the anode. Isoelectric focusing of proteins for 2DE was originally carried out in PAGE tube gels but was simplified by Angelika Gorg and Pier Righetti who independently developed immobilized pH gradients (IPG) (reviewed by Righetti and Bossi (1997)). IPG strips contain acid and basic buffering groups that are covalently incorporated into acrylamide gels attached to a thin layer of plastic. This development facilitated reproducible focusing over broad or narrow pH ranges including the highly acid and basic regions of the pH scale. Size-based separation of proteins in the second dimension uses SDS-PAGE (Klose, 1975; O'Farrell, 1975). Proteins which have been fixed at their isoelectric point by IEF are equilibrated in an SDS solution for the formation of SDS-protein complexes. SDS is an anionic detergent that binds proteins and confers mass-based charge that allows size separation in polyacrylamide gels. 1.2.2. Differencegelelectrophoresis(DIGE) Prior to the development of DIGE in 1997 (Unlu et al., 1997) the standard method for comparative 2DE was to match gels that had been stained for proteins after electrophoresis. Matching was limited by variability in protein loading and staining and the reproducibility of spot matching methods. Unlu et al. (1997) described DIGE using fluorescent cyanine (Cy) dyes containing an N-hydroxysuccinimidyl (NHS) ester reactive group for the labeling of protein samples prior to IEF. The Cy dyes Cy2, Cy3 and Cy5 are used to label up to three protein samples for analysis on one gel. The Cy dyes can be used for minimal or saturation (for low protein abundance samples) labeling of protein sets. For minimal labeling, the NHS moiety of the Cy dyes covalently bind to lysine residues of proteins by an amide bond. Cy dyes carry 2 a single intrinsic positive charge, as do lysine residues in acidic conditions, and upon attachment to a lysine the positive charge is replaced causing no significant change in the pI of the protein. It is often advantageous to incorporate an internal standard composed of equal amounts of all of the protein samples labeled with Cy2 to facilitate gel matching between replicates (Karp & Lilley, 2005). The Cy dyes are separately added to each condition, including the internal standard before they are separated in the first and second dimensions by 2DE (Figure 1). Computer-aided image analysis is used to determine differences in protein abundance among samples. There are several advantages of using 2DE combined with DIGE for comparative proteomic analysis. Two-dimensional electrophoresis allows visual and computational analysis of differences in protein abundance between samples, and of changes in protein spot position (mass or pI) in gels that can be due to posttranslational modification of proteins. Statistical analysis of changes in protein abundance is enhanced by uniform matching of protein spots by comparison with the internal standard protein mixture that is included in all gels. Disadvantages of gel-based methods include the time consuming aspects of the experiments and the difficulty to detect low abundance proteins (Pham & Wright, 2007). 3 Figure 1 - Summary of the DIGE labeling process. Protein extracts of each condition are labeled with Cy dyes. Images of each Cy dye labeled protein set are visualized by excitation at a certain wavelength and are overlaid for image analysis. An internal standard of all proteins included in the analysis is labeled with Cy2 and is used as the reference for spot matching on each gel. Copyright for use of this image was approved by GE Healthcare. 1.3. Gel‐freeproteomics As an alternative or complementary strategy to 2DE, gel-free techniques use mass spectrometry based analysis of proteolytic digests of proteins (Pham & Wright, 2007). Protein samples are digested to give large sets of peptide fragments that are separated by liquid chromatography prior to tandem mass spectrometry for peptide and protein identification. The enzyme trypsin that cleaves peptide bonds on the Cterminal side of arginine or lysine is often used as the proteolytic reagent. This general approach can be called LC MS/MS, gel-free analysis, or shotgun proteomics. Quantitative methods include spectral counting (a label-free method) and isotopic labeling. In spectral counting the number of times a peptide detected is used as a 4 measure of protein abundance (Lundgren et al., 2010). Alternatively, incorporation of isotopic labels for the tagging of proteins can be used to measure changes in protein abundance. Two of the commonly used methods of isotopic labeling are SILAC (Stable Isotope Labeling And Culture) and iTRAQ (Isobaric Tags for Relative and Absolute Quantification) (Brewis & Brennan, 2010). SILAC was originally designed for mammalian samples but the technique has been adapted for yeast, bacteria and plant cultures (Ong & Mann, 2006). The technique involves the incorporation of a stable isotope-labeled essential amino acid into a cell culture lacking the same essential amino acid. For SILAC, cells are grown in medium containing amino acids such as arginine or lysine labeled with 13C or 15N stable isotopes and for comparison of protein change are mixed with cells grown in natural abundance (12C or 14N) amino acids. Shotgun mass spectrometry is then used to detect peptides that differ in the ratio of heavy and light isotopic labels that reflect differences in protein abundance between samples. A major advantage of isotopic labeling is the sensitivity of the tags and the ability to detect low abundance proteins that is a major limiting factor of 2D based techniques. For iTRAQ, samples are chemically labeled with amine specific reagents containing stable isotopes and a mixing protocol is used to compare the abundances of digest peptides and hence their parent proteins from different samples. The first application of iTRAQ in yeast was done by Ross et al. (2004). The shotgun approach compared a wildtype strain with two mutant strains. Subsequently, Pham et al. (2006) examined the proteomes of wildtype yeast grown in media supplemented with 12%, 21% or 30% glucose. Protein separation and identification was completed using LC MS/MS resulting in detection of 413 proteins. Differences among enzymes involved in carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism were detected. Subsequent studies are outlined later in this Introduction. 1.4. Proteinidentification Regardless of the method for protein separation, mass spectrometry has become the standard for protein identification (Pham & Wright, 2007). A common mass spectrometric method for the identification of proteins involves peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) using MALDI TOF (matrix assisted laser desorption ionization 5 time of flight) or electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (MS). Sequencespecific peptide fragments are created by cleaving proteins with an enzyme with high specificity. Trypsin is a commonly used proteolytic agent which cleaves proteins at the C-terminal residue of arginine or lysine. MS-based peptide masses are then used to match to sequence databases for probability based protein identification. More specific matching is obtained using MS/MS to measure sequence-based fragments of the peptides that are generated in the mass spectrometer. 1.5. Saccharomycescerevisiae The budding yeast S. cerevisiae is a well-studied organism. The single celled eukaryote had its genome sequence reported in April 1996 revealing a 16 kb genome with six chromosomes (Goffeau et al., 1996). Thirty percent of the yeast genome is homologous with the human genome making it an excellent model for research using molecular biological tools such as the yeast gene deletion set (Giaever et al., 2002), and red fluorescent protein (RFP), green fluorescent protein (GFP) (Bisson & Fraenkel, 1983) and TAP-tagged libraries (Babu et al., 2009). Large-scale coverage of the yeast proteome has also been reported (de Godoy et al., 2008; Picotti et al., 2013; Shevchenko et al., 1996). There are several online resources that are readily available including the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG, http://www.genome.jp/kegg and the Yeast Genome Database (SGD, http://www.yeastgenome.org/). 1.5.1. CarbohydratemetabolisminS.cerevisiae S. cerevisiae has the ability to grow under a variety of conditions, in particular on many carbon substrates. One characteristic of this yeast is fermentation of glucose to ethanol under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. The specific conditions relevant to this thesis research are growth on glucose or glycerol. Growth on glucose utilizes the glycolytic pathway to produce pyruvate that can be metabolized to ethanol and carbon dioxide (fermentation). In contrast, fermentation does not occur during growth on glycerol. Glycerol can be used for synthesis of glucose (gluconeogenesis) or for energy production using glycolysis coupled to the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation. 6 S. cerevisiae can grow on a number of sugars such as fructose and mannose but prefers glucose. There are 18 hexose transporters and at least six are specific for glucose transport. Each glucose transporter has a different affinity for glucose to suit substrate availability. In high glucose conditions regardless of oxygen, glucose is directed into the cell via the low glucose affinity Hxt1 transporter and fermented to produce ethanol and carbon dioxide (Ozcan & Johnston, 1995). Metabolism of glucose is directed through glycolysis with the upregulation of genes involved in ethanol synthesis and the repression of genes responsible for other pathways of utilization (Figure 2). This is known as the glucose repression effect (Gancedo, 1992). In contrast, when glucose is limited, glucose is not fermented to produce ethanol but is fully oxidized to produce CO2 via the TCA acid cycle (Postma et al., 1989). Figure 2 - A simplified diagram of glucose metabolism in S. cerevisiae. The diagram illustrates the metabolism of glucose towards ethanol synthesis via glycolysis and fermentation in glucose abundant conditions. The direction of glucose metabolism is supported by the upregulation of glycolytic genes and repression of genes involved in other pathways of utilization such as enzymes involved in the citric acid cycle. The copyrights of the original image (Johnston & Kim, 2005) for modification were granted. 7 1.6. Glycolysisandfermentation 1.6.1. Glycolysis Glucose is metabolized to pyruvate (Lunt & Vander Heiden, 2011) by glycolysis in S. cerevisiae and in many other organisms as illustrated in Figure 3. Figure 3 - Proteins and metabolites involved in glycolysis. Glucose is degraded to pyruvate through a series of reversible (↕) and irreversible (↓) enzyme-catalyzed reactions. Enzyme names are shown using the symbols described in the text. In the first, irreversible, step of glycolysis hexose is phosphorylated by either hexokinases Hxk1 and Hxk2 or glucokinase Glk1 to glucose-6-phosphate. Hxk2 is the main kinase with preference for glucose, fructose or mannose as substrates 8 (Bisson & Fraenkel, 1983; De Winde et al., 1996). During growth on non-fermentable substrates transcript abundance for Hxk1 and Glk1 increases, while Hxk2 decreases (Rodriguez et al., 2001). In the second step of glycolysis, glucose-6-phosphate is reversibly converted to fructose-6-phosphate by phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi1). The third reaction of glycolysis is phosphorylation of fructose-6-phosphate by phosphofructokinase (Pfk) to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. Phosphofructokinase is a heterooctamer composed of four alpha and four beta subunits (Pfk1 and Pfk2 respectively). This enzyme is low abundance and has not been reported in gel-based proteomic studies without genetic manipulation (Boucherie et al., 1995). The next reaction is the cleavage of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate to glyceraldehyde-3phosphate by fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase (Fba1). The subsequent interconversion of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to dihydroxyacetone phosphate is catalyzed by triosephosphate isomerase (Tpi1). The succeeding steps of glycolysis result in conversion of the three-carbon intermediates to pyruvate, plus generation of ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate is oxidized and phosphorylated by the homotetramer glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Tdh). There are three isozymes derived from three corresponding genes (TDH1-3). Another reaction which results in the generation of ATP is the catalysis of the transfer of a phosphoryl group from 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate to ADP by phosphoglycerate kinase (Pgk1). Subsequently, phosphoglycerate mutase (Pgm1) converts 3-phosphoglycerate to 2-phosphoglycerate, which is then metabolized to phosphoglycerate by enolase (Eno). The two isozymes Eno1 and Eno2 are encoded by the respective genes ENO1 and ENO2. In glucose rich medium Eno2 protein is 20times more abundant than Eno1 but Eno1 increases to Eno2 levels in cells grown on ethanol or lactate (McAlister & Holland, 1982). The last reaction of glycolysis is the irreversible catalysis of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate by pyruvate kinase (Pyk). Pyk1 (Cdc19) is the primary enzyme. Its paralog, Pyk2, is repressed in glucose conditions (Boles et al., 1997). 1.6.2. Fermentation During fermentation in S. cerevisiae pyruvate is primarily converted to ethanol using a two-step process. First, pyruvate is converted to acetaldehyde by pyruvate decarboxylase. There are three pyruvate decarboxylases (Pdc1, 5 and 6) encoded by 9 different genes PDC1, PDC5 and PDC6. Pdc1 and Pdc5 are induced in the presence of glucose. Pdc6 is a low abundance isoform but increase when cells are gown on ethanol (Hohmann, 1991; Seeboth et al., 1990). Following the decarboxylation of pyruvate, acetaldehyde is reduced to ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase. There are seven alcohol dehydrogenase genes ADH1-7 (de Smidt et al., 2008). Two of these (ADH6 and ADH7) belong to the cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD) family and the remaining five are involved in ethanol metabolism (ADH1-5). The five dehydrogenases involved in ethanol metabolism are summarized in Table 1. During growth on glucose Adh1 is the primary dehydrogenase responsible for the oxidation of acetaldehyde to ethanol. The 348 aa enzyme is localized in the cytoplasm. Adh2 is responsible for catalyzing the reverse reaction, reduction of ethanol to acetaldehyde. It is regulated by the transcription factor Adr1, which also has roles in glycerol metabolism. Expression of ADH2 is repressed in glucose grown conditions (Stahlberg et al., 2008). Adh1 and Adh2 have greater than 90% sequence similarity at the protein level and, due to only small differences in size and pI (Table 1), are expected to co-migrate on 2DE gels. Adh3, 4 and 5 are also capable of catalyzing the oxidation of acetaldehyde but in more specific conditions. Of these, ADH3 and ADH5 are repressed in the presence of glucose (Young & Pilgrim, 1985). ADH3 encodes an alcohol dehydrogenase which is localized to the mitochondrion (Wiesenfeld et al., 1975). Wiesenfeld et al. (1975) reported that sequence homology between Adh3 and Adh1 or Adh2 at the amino acid level was 79% and 80% respectively. Relatively little is known about the cytoplasmically localized Adh5 whose encoding gene, ADH5, was discovered upon sequencing of chromosome II (Feldmann et al., 1994). Smith et al. (2004) proposed that Adh5 was the sole enzyme for ethanol production in an ADH1 ADH3 double null mutant. Adh4 is localized to the mitochondrion like Adh3, but is not repressed in cells grown on glucose. The pioneers of Adh4 research were Paquin and Williamson (1986) and Walton et al. (1986). Early studies on Adh4 implied Adh4 was absent in the presence of Adh1. However, in 1999 Perrot et al. (1999) identified Adh4 in the presence of Adh1 and 2 using MAT α mating type yeast. 10 Table 1 - The five S. cerevisiae Adh isoforms involved in ethanol metabolism. The information was derived from ExPASyhttp://www.expasy.org/. The ExPASy records indicate that there is MS evidence of protein for Adh 1 and 2, but that there is not MS evidence for Adh3-5 protein in S. cerevisiae. Adh kDa pI Number of molecules per cell in log phase (from ExPASy) 1 36.8 6.21 Not recorded Cytoplasm Aldehyde alcohol Major activity 2 36.7 6.26 1620 Cytoplasm Alcohol aldehyde Glucose repressed 3 40.4 7.24 11600 Mitochondrion Aldehyde alcohol Glucose repressed 4 41.1 5.76 125 Aldehyde alcohol Second acting aldehyde reducing dehydrogenase Aldehyde alcohol Glucose repressed Subcellular localization Function Role during fermentation on glucose Mitochondrion 5 37.6 5.94 1310 Cytoplasm nucleus 11 1.7. Glycerolmetabolismandgluconeogenesis Figure 4 - Proteins and metabolites involved in glycerol metabolism, gluconeogenesis/ glycolysis. Enzymes involved in glycerol metabolism (←) and gluconeogenesis (↑)/glycolysis (↓) are presented. Enzymes responsible for the catalysis of reversible gluconeogenic/ glycolytic reactions are represented by ↕. 12 1.7.1. Glycerolmetabolism Utilization of glycerol by S. cerevisiae leads to entry into the glycolytic and gluconeogenic pathways. Glycerol is also a potential product of the metabolism of glucose. Two enzymes Gut1 (glycerol kinase) and Gut2 (glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) carry out the sequential reversible reactions converting glycerol to dihydroxyacetone phosphate, which is an intermediate of both glycolysis and gluconeogenesis (Figure 4). Gut1 is a cytoplasmic enzyme that phosphorylates glycerol to glycerol-3-phosphate. Glycerol-3-phosphate translocates to mitochondria where Gut2 catalyzes conversion to dihydroxyacetone phosphate. Dihydroxyacetone phosphate is transported back into the cytoplasm where it enters the gluconeogenic/ glycolytic pathways. The genes of encoding both enzymes, GUT1 and GUT2 are repressed during fermentation of glucose (Sprague & Cronan, 1977). The mediator of GUT1 is Adr1, which is also the transcriptional activator of ADH2 (Grauslund et al., 1999) . 1.7.2. Gluconeogenesis Figure 4 also illustrates the reactions of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis showing the irreversible reactions that are common to both pathways and the irreversible reactions that are specific for one or the other of the two pathways. There are two irreversible reactions in glycolysis. Pfk1 and Pyk1 catalyze two of the glycolysis specific reactions. The corresponding irreversible steps of gluconeogenesis are catalyzed by fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase (Fbp1) and a two-step reaction involving phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Pck1) and pyruvate carboxylase (Pyc1 or Pyc2). Pyc1 or its paralog Pyc2 converts pyruvate to oxaloacetate. In yeast this reaction occurs in the cytoplasm unlike mammals where the reaction occurs in the mitochondrion. Oxaloacetate is catalyzed to phosphophenol pyruvate by Pck1. The gluconeogenic enzyme Fbp1 converts fructose-1,6-bisphosphate to fructose-6phosphate. 1.8. Regulationofglucosemetabolism The concentration of glucose plays a crucial role in glucose metabolism. It has influential effects on gene repression and induction. When there are high concentrations of extracellular glucose, greater than 1% (Yin et al., 2003), low affinity hexose transporter (HXT) genes are expressed and allow glucose entry into the cell. 13 Extracellular glucose concentrations as low as 0.2% cause the cells to respire (Guidi et al., 2010). Two of the many pathways involved in glucose induction and repression are the Snf3-Rgt2 pathway required for glucose uptake by hexose transporters, and the Mig1-Snf1 pathway. Snf (sucrose nonfermenter) proteins affect transcription of a number of genes. 1.8.1. Snf3‐Rgt2pathway The induction of hexose transporter genes is carried out by the Snf3-Rgt2 pathway. In high glucose conditions, glucose bound to low glucose affinity sensor Rgt2 (restores glucose transport), and Snf3 activates membrane bound yeast casein kinase 1 (Yck1) by a conformational change (Moriya & Johnston, 2004) (Figure 5 top). The activated Yck1 phosphorylates Mth1 (MSN three homolog) and Std1 (suppressor of Tbp deletion) which are bound to the C-terminal cytoplasmic tails of the glucose receptors. Subsequently, phosphorylated Mth1 and Std1 are ubiquinated by the ubiquitin-ligase complex of Skp1 - Cul1 - F-box with Grr1 (SCFGrr1) (Moriya & Johnston, 2004) and targets them for proteasome degradation. The transcriptional repressor Rgt1 losses its ability to bind DNA due to loss of Mth1, and Std1 (Kim et al., 2003), becomes hyperphosphorylated and translocates to the cytoplasm allowing transcription of HXT1 (Johnston & Kim, 2005; Kim et al., 2003). Whereas in low glucose conditions, intermediate and high glucose affinity transporters are induced to mediate glucose uptake (Figure 5 bottom) (Boles et al., 1997). This process involves the high glucose affinity glucose receptor, Snf3. The intracellular signal generated from glucose detection is still unclear. However it is known that SCFGrr1 (Li & Johnston, 1997), Rgt1 and its co-repressors Tup1 and Ssn6, and Mth1 and Std1 (Lakshmanan et al., 2003) are involved in the transcriptional activation of intermediate and high affinity hexose transporters, HXT2, HXT3 and HXT4 (Flick et al., 2003; Ozcan & Johnston, 1995). 1.8.2. Mig1‐Snf1pathway The repression or activation of genes involved in glucose utilization other than glycolysis is controlled by the Mig1-Snf1 pathway (Figure 5 right) (Johnston, 1999). The pathway involves Reg1-Glc7 protein phosphatase, Snf1 complex, and Mig1. The 14 pathway depends on the activity of the Snf1 complex which is regulated by glucose (Jiang & Carlson, 1996). In high glucose conditions, glucose is transported by Hxt1 and elevated intracellular glucose levels prevent Reg1-Glc7 from activating the Snf1 complex (Figure 5 top, right). The Snf1 complex has a catalytic (CD) and regulatory domain (RD). The catalytic domain is autoinhibited by binding to the regulatory domain resulting in an inactive Snf1 complex (Jiang & Carlson, 1996). As a result, transcriptional repressor Mig1 and its co-repressors Tup1 and Ssn6 are able to repress genes associated with more efficient means of glucose utilization as well as high affinity transporters, HXT2, HXT3 and HXT4 (Gancedo, 1998). In contrast, when glucose is low Snf4 is able to bind to the regulatory domain of Snf1 causing the release of the catalytic domain (Jiang & Carlson, 1996) (Figure 5 bottom, left). The active Snf1 complex now has the ability to phosphorylate Mig1, which causes Mig1 to dissociate from its corepressors (Treitel et al., 1998). As a result Mig1, Tup1 and Ssn6 are unable to repress transcription. 15 Figure 5 - The induction and repression r n of genes involved in n the Snf3-R Rgt2 (left) and Mig1-Snf11 (right) paathways off S. cerevisiaae. The dia agram sho ows cells grrown in high (top) and low (botto om) glucose condition ns. The ab bove illustrrations are modified diagrams from Ganccedo (1998 8), Johnston n and Kim m (2005), and Rolland et al. (2002 2). The copyrrights for the t modificcations of ttheir imagees were ap pproved. 16 1.9. Transcriptomicanalysisofcarbonsubstratemetabolism In addition to study of individual genes and proteins both transcript and proteome analysis have been used to examine metabolism in S. cerevisiae. The power of transcript analysis is based on the ability to measure the effects of many genes. Oxidative metabolism and fermentation of carbon substrates have been extensively studied at the level of the transcriptome. A recent interest is towards transcript studies focusing on substrate transition to get a greater understanding of the adaptation process. Roberts and Hudson (2006) used microarrays to examine the transition of cells grown to early log phase in glucose to a medium containing a nonfermentable substrate of glycerol or ethanol. They found the upregulation of the following gene clusters ‘respiration’, ‘carbohydrate and fatty acid metabolism’, ‘stress’, ‘endocytosis, actin and stress’, and ‘protein localization’. The following biological process clusters were down regulated, ‘respiration – oxidative phosphorylation, mitochondrial electron transport chain’, ‘transport’, ‘membrane and sphingolipid metabolism’, and ‘stress, electron transport chain’. Transcriptional work by Dikicioglu et al. (2011) examined the effects of cells grown in a glucose-limited culture to a pulse of glucose. In response to the addition of glucose they found significant changes in 372 gene transcripts. These were genes involved in the following biological processes ‘carboxylic acid metabolism’, ‘amino acid metabolism’ ‘purine metabolism’, ‘glycolysis’, ‘oxidative phosphorylation’, ‘alcoholic catabolism’ and ‘energy-coupled proton transport’. Genes involved in glycolysis that were mentioned to be upregulated during this action were not an immediate response. Five genes associated with alcohol metabolism, PFK1, PFK2, ENO2, TKL1 and CTS1, were also upregulated. 1.10. Proteomicanalysis Proteomics complements measurements of mRNA transcripts through analysis of individual proteins. There is often a poor or only modest correlation between the amount of mRNA and the protein product. Wu et al. (2008) analyzed the relationship between transcriptome and proteome in S. cerevisiae. They concluded that protein degradation was a major factor affecting mRNA-protein ratios. Massoni et al. (2009) used pulse chase of S. cerevisiae strains grown in [35S] methionine and 2DE analysis to examine changes in abundance of individual protein spots. Their study included 17 detection of post-translational modifications that resulted in change of protein spot position on the 2D gels, and analysis of differences in protein turnover. Posttranslational modifications were identified by shift in pI, in most cases towards the acidic end of the pH scale. They also found proteolytic products (fragments) of proteins that resulted in changes in abundance of protein isoforms. For example, a decrease of pyruvate decarboxylase was complemented by an increase in abundance of its fragments Pdc1f1 and Pdc1f2. Analysis of the S. cerevisiae proteome using 2DE or gel-free LC MS/MS has been described in several reports from Matthias Mann’s research group. Initially, Shevchenko et al. (1996) described methods for identification of protein spots excised from 2D gels, resulting in identification of 150 proteins using a combination of MALDI TOF MS mass fingerprinting and ESI LC MS/MS of tryptic digests. Advances in mass spectrometer design since that time have led to major enhancements in resolution and sensitivity so that over 4000 yeast proteins can now be identified using gel free LC MS/MS of yeast extracts (Nagaraj et al., 2012). Several groups have used proteomics, with or without transcript analysis, to examine fermentative and oxidative metabolism in S. cerevisiae. Kolkman et al. (2005) compared the effects of glucose or ethanol-limitation on the transcriptome and 2DE proteome of cells grown under steady-state conditions in chemostat cultures. Protein identification by MALDI TOF MS or LC MS/MS found 44 proteins involved in central carbon metabolism including the functional categories glycolysis, pyruvate branch point, TCA cycle and gluconeogenesis and glyoxylate shunt. Fifteen proteins showed quantitative differences in abundance (p ≤ 0.02) between ethanol or glucoselimited cells and a further two proteins (Hxk1, Adh1) were detected only during glucose-limitation compared to 12 proteins (mainly citric acid cycle and gluconeogenic enzymes) that were detected only during ethanol-limitation. Glycolytic enzymes shared between the two conditions were Glk1, Fba1, Tpi1, Tdh2, Tdh3, Pgk1, Gpm1, Eno1 and Eno2. Usaite et al. (2008) used LC MS/MS shotgun analysis of tryptic digests for comparison of wildtype and Snf1 protein kinase mutant strains grown aerobically under steady-state conditions. Approximately 2400 proteins were quantified using 18 spectral counting and SILAC methods. The large increase in number of proteins detected compared with 2DE reflects the greater depth of analysis using gel-free MS methods although detection of processed protein fragments is not so straightforward. Approximately 15% of the measured proteins, including carbohydrate metabolism enzymes, varied (p ≤ 0.05) between the wildtype and mutant strains. Calculated differences in protein abundance were a 2.3-fold increase in Adh1 and a 5.3-fold decrease in Adh2 in a Snf1-deficient strain compared to the wildtype, suggesting a shift towards ethanol production when Snf1 was deficient. Bruckmann et al. (2009) used 2DE and transcript analysis to compare anaerobic and aerobic cultures grown in steady-state glucose-limited conditions. One hundred and ten identified protein spots, representing the products of 75 unique genes, differed by more than 2-fold between the cultures. The glycolytic enzymes Cdc19, Eno1, Hxk1, Pgk1, as well as proteins involved in pyruvate metabolism (Pdc1 and Adh1) were more abundant in anaerobic conditions. Changes in proteins specific to aerobic growth were associated with oxidative metabolism, including decreases in Adh2 and Ald4 and 6 for cells grown anaerobically. They also identified changes at the level of protein that were greater than predicted from transcripts. Guidi et al. (2010) examined the metabolic adaptability of S. cerevisiae to three different concentrations of glucose. The three concentrations tested were 0.5% (low, glucose restriction), 2% (control) and 20% (excess). Proteins were separated by 2DE and abundances were measured using imaging of Coomassie stained gels, which is less accurate than DIGE. Twenty-one differentially expressed proteins were identified by MALDI mass fingerprinting. The abundance of some Pdc1, Pgk1, Eno2 and Tdh3 protein spots decreased in 0.5 and 20% glucose conditions compared to cells grown in 2% glucose. However, spots matching to the glycolytic enzymes Pdc1, Eno2 and Tdh3 increased in abundance at 20% glucose compared to control conditions. The analysis was complicated by detection of multiple protein spots for some of enzymes. For example, two protein spots matched to enolase 2 (Eno2). The most abundant form increased nearly 2-fold in 20% glucose, while a less abundant form showed a 3.5-fold increase in 2% compared to 0.5% glucose. Of two detected Adh1 protein spots, the most abundant did not show major change between 0.5% and 2% glucose but increased nearly 3-fold in 20% glucose. Measurement of glucose 19 use and alcohol production indicated complete conversion to ethanol at 0.5% glucose, and 63% and 38% conversion respectively at 2% and 20% glucose. Transcript and proteome changes associated with nutrient limitation were examined by Stephen Oliver’s research group Gutteridge et al. (2010). Carbon-limitation was carried out by a shift from 2.1% to 0.25% glucose in the medium. iTRAQ with LC MS/MS of tryptic digests was used for the proteomics analysis. Proteins that changed more than two-fold in abundance in glucose-limited medium included increases in hexokinase Hxk1 and aldehyde dehydrogenases Ald 1 and 3, and decreases of the hexose transporter Hxt3, and alcohol dehydrogenase 4 (Adh4). Huang et al. (2012) used LC MS/MS of tryptic digests to compare the early- mid- and late-exponential phase (22.5, 33 and 44 h) proteins of S. cerevisiae grown in shake flask cultures with initial 4% glucose. Ethanol was the major metabolic product after 24 h, glycerol and acetic acid were not detected. Of the total 1389 proteins identified (representing 1331 unique genes) there were differences in protein abundance between stages of the growth phase, including lower amounts of ribosomal proteins associated with cell proliferation towards the end of the growth phase. Adh1 and the citric acid cycle enzymes were represented at all three stages of growth indicating capacity both for fermentation of glucose to ethanol and oxidative metabolism. Most recently, Stobaugh et al. (2013) used LC MS/MS to compare the proteomes of S. cerevisiae grown on glucose or glycerol in shake flasks. Their emphasis was on comparison of fractionation by anion-exchange or reversed-phase chromatography of proteins prior to LC MS/MS of tryptic digests. Protein abundances were quantified using spectral counting, carbon substrate related changes were expected for 1.5-fold differences in protein abundance at p ≤ 0.05. There were differences in the numbers of proteins detected and quantified between the two prefractionation protocols, however, the general conclusion was that the abundances of several glycolytic enzymes did not differ between growth on glucose or glycerol. Their results are summarized in Figure 6. In general, growth on glucose (dextrose) resulted in higher abundance of hexokinase B (Hxk2) and enzymes for synthesis of glycerol from dihydroxyacetone phosphate. Growth on glycerol favored production of hexokinase A (Hxk1) and glucokinase (Glk1), and enzymes involved in 20 gluconeogenesis, the use of glycerol and oxidative citric acid cycle activity. Although the amount of Adh1, that catalyzes synthesis of ethanol, did not vary significantly between growth on glucose or glycerol, use of glycerol as a substrate resulted in greater abundance of Adh2 and aldehyde dehydrogenases that catalyze the two-step pathway for synthesis of acetate from ethanol. The gluconeogenic enzyme fructose1,6-biphosphatase was more abundant using glycerol as a substrate in samples prepared using reversed-phase chromatography for protein fractionation, but this enzyme was not detected using ion-exchange workup. Overall, the results illustrate the effect of carbon substrate on the abundances of proteins involved in pathways of carbon metabolism, and the importance of sample preparation protocols for protein detection and quantification. 21 Figure 6 - Proteomic analysis of S. cerevisiae grown in glucose (dextrose) or glycerol based media by Stobaugh et al. (2013). Samples were pre-fractionated by anionexchange (a) or reversed-phase (b) chromatography before LC MS/MS. Prefractionation of proteins by reversed-phase chromatography recovered more proteins than anion-exchange chromatography. Glycolytic proteins were found in both substrate conditions and between the two techniques. The copyrights to use this diagram were granted. 1.11. Goalofthisresearch The overall goal of this project was to examine the extent to which the abundances of enzymes involved in glucose metabolism varied between conditions that favored fermentation or respiration. Two-dimensional-DIGE was used for the comparison of protein abundances as many of the relevant enzymes are relatively high abundance and can be detected on 2D gels. One qualification for use of 2DE is that hydrophobic 22 proteins including membrane transporters are not soluble during the initial focusing step and are therefore not detected. The emphasis of the project was therefore on detection of soluble proteins including the enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism. The four specific aims were to: Set up experimental conditions for extraction and separation of S. cerevisiae proteins Create a database of proteins identified by MALDI TOF/TOF MS of tryptic digests of proteins excised from 2DE gels Examine substrate conditions that favor fermentation or oxidation of the carbon source Use 2D-DIGE to compare the enzyme abundances between conditions that favor fermentation or oxidative metabolism of the carbon source Growth of S. cerevisiae in glucose or glycerol in shake flask cultures was chosen for the DIGE analysis. At the time this decision was made there were no reported proteomic comparisons using these two substrates, although there is now the shotgun LC MS/MS analysis of Stobaugh et al. (2013). This Thesis is therefore the first 2DE study of protein variation using these growth conditions. 23 2. Methods 2.1. Yeaststrainsandstorage The haploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain BY4741 (MATa: his3∆1; leu2∆0; met15∆0; ura3∆0) was used in this project. The strain was stored in 15% glycerol and yeast peptone (YP) media at -80ºC for long-term preservation. Single colonies were generated by streaking out cells on an YPD agar plate (1% yeast extract, 2% peptone, 2% D-glucose) using aseptic technique, then incubated at 30C for 2 days, and kept at 4°C for up to 3 months. 2.2. Comparativegrowthexperiments To analyze the growth of BY4741 in fermentative and non-fermentative states cells were grown in (a) varying glucose concentrations with Synthetic Complete (SC) media and (b) a high glucose concentration versus glycerol supplemented SC media. The growth conditions for the two experiments are shown in Figure 7. For the glucose experiment, cultures supplemented with 0.2% (low), 0.5% (medium) or 2% (high) glucose and SC media were set up from precultured 2% glucose cultures in stationary phase (seeding culture). The comparative analysis of BY4741 grown in SC media supplemented with glycerol or glucose is described as the glycerol versus glucose experiment. Cultures of BY4741 supplemented with 3% glycerol (3% G2) or 2% glucose (2% D) were inoculated from previously grown stationary phase cultures of 3% glycerol (3% G1) in SC media. The growth of BY4741 using glycerol is commonly supplemented with ethanol. However, the addition of ethanol was excluded in order to simplify the measurement of ethanol production. 2.3. Growthconditions Cells were grown in 25 mL of SC media supplemented with 2% glucose or 3% glycerol at 30°C, with shaking at 250 rpm (Bioline, NSW, Australia) as shown in Figure 7. Cultures were inoculated with 6.5 x 105 cells from previously grown stationary phase cultures, in conical flasks with a maximum depth of 1 cm medium to ensure aeration. 24 Figure 7 - Growth conditions of BY4741 for the analysis of fermentative and oxidative metabolism. Cells were grown in SC media supplemented with different glucose concentrations (top) or 3% glycerol vs. 2% glucose (bottom). 2.4. GrowthCurves Three 10 mL cultures of BY4741 in SC media with 2% glucose or 3% glycerol were prepared. The point at which cultures were inoculated with cells was time zero. An aliquot of each culture was taken, diluted 10X and the optical density (OD) measured at 600 nm using a Cary 300 Bio UV-Visible Spectrophotometer (Varian, VIC, Australia). The first measurement was taken at time zero. For glucose supplemented growth, the next measurement was taken at t = 4.5 h then every 1-1.5 h thereafter. For glycerol supplemented cultures, the next measurements were taken at t = 12 h and t = 15 h followed by a 9 h interval. From herein, time points were every 3 h for 15 h followed by a 9 h interval with the final measurement at t = 96 h. 2.5. Harvestingyeastcultures Cells were collected at OD600 = 0.5 and were centrifuged using an Eppendorf Centrifuge 5810 (Hamburg, Germany) at 4,000 rpm for 5 min at 4˚C. The culture supernatant was removed and stored at -80˚C for glucose and ethanol analysis. The cells were washed three times in ddH2O followed by centrifugation at 13,000 rpm, at 25˚C for 5 min using a Beckman Coulter Microfuge®16 Centrifuge (Krefeld, Germany). The third wash had an extra addition of Complete Mini EDTA-free 25 Protease Inhibitor (1:100 w/v) (Roche, Mannheim, Germany). The yeast cells were stored at -80˚C until they were lysed for protein extraction. 2.6. Proteinextractionfromcells Two protein extraction methods were explored for proteomic analysis of BY4741. First, a Yeast Protein Extraction Buffer Kit from GE Healthcare (Uppsala, Sweden) was used. Harvested yeast cells were washed two times by the addition of 5X the volume of Yeast Suspension Buffer, mixed then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm at 4˚C for 5 min. The supernatant was discarded after centrifugation. Cells were lysed in 2X the volume of the cell pellet with Yeast Protein Extraction Buffer. Protease inhibitor (1:100 w/v) was added, mixed then incubated on ice for 30 min. Cells were briefly incubated at 37°C for 2 min then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 30 min at 4°C. The supernatant was collected and stored at -80°C. The remaining cell pellet was discarded. The second method used lysis buffer (4% w/v CHAPS, 2 M thiourea, 7 M urea, 30 mM Tris pH 8.8) and white quartz sand (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). Onetimes the volume of lysis buffer was added to the cell pellet then ground in a microcentrifuge tube for 60 sec with quartz sand using a mini pestle (GE Healthcare). Following cell grinding, cells were vortexed for 15 min at 4˚C and centrifuged at 13,000 rpm at 4˚C for 5 min. The supernatant was collected and stored at -20C. The remaining cell pellet was discarded. 2.7. One‐dimensionalSDSPAGE One-dimensional SDS PAGE was used for initial examination of the resulting cell lysates. The gel electrophoresis running buffer (1X) was prepared by mixing 760 mL of ddH2O and 40 mL of NuPAGE® MOPS SDS running buffer (20X) (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). A 10 or 12 well NuPAGE® 4-12% Novex Bis-Tris ZoomTM 1.0 mm gel (Invitrogen) was rinsed in ddH2O and assembled in an XCellSureLockTM Novex Mini-Cell electrophoresis system (Invitrogen). Both the inner and outer chambers were filled with the 1X running buffer, and 500 L of NuPAGE® Antioxidant (Invitrogen) was added to the inner chamber. Each protein sample (1 µL) was mixed with 2.5 L of protein denaturant, 4X NuPAGE® LDS Sample Buffer (Invitrogen), and 1L of 10X NuPAGE® Sample Reducing Agent (Invitrogen). These samples 26 were centrifuged (5 min, 25C, 13,000 rpm) and heated at 70ºC in an Ori-Block® OB-1 heat block (Techne, Cambridge, England) for 10 min. Samples were then loaded into separate lanes of the gel. Either Mark12 (Invitrogen) or Rainbow 851 (GE Healthcare) was used as a protein standard and also loaded into a well. The gel was electrophoresed at 200 V for 55 min using an Electrophoresis Power Supply-EPS 301 (GE Healthcare). 2.8. Gelfixing,stainingandscanning Following electrophoresis, proteins were fixed by placing gels in 50% v/v ethanol, 3% v/v phosphoric acid for 30 min with shaking at 15 rpm on a Labnet Gyrotwister (Woodbridge, NJ). The gels were rinsed three times in ddH2O for 30 min and transferred to 17% w/v ammonium sulfate, 34% v/v methanol, 3% v/v phosphoric acid. Gels were left in this solution for at least 60 min before the addition of Coomassie (CBB G-250) (Biorad, Hercules, CA). The gels were left in the staining solution for 2 days, and then washed three times in ddH2O for 30 min each to remove excess CBB G-250. Washed gels were scanned at 12 bits per pixel with a 50 µm pixel size using a Personal Densitometer SI (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA), and the gel images were viewed using ImageQuantTM software (Version 5.2, Molecular Dynamics). Images were saved as .gel files. 2.9. Proteinconcentration The protein concentration of each cell lysate was measured using a GE Healthcare 2D-Quant kit. A standard curve was generated with duplicates of 0, 4, 6, 12 and 30 µg using BSA. Aliquots of 2 µL of each protein sample were tested in duplicate. First, proteins in the lysates and standard curve were precipitated by the addition of 500 µL 2D-Quant Precipitant, vortexed then incubated at room temperature for 3 min. Following this, 500 µL of Co-precipitant was added and mixed by inverting the microcentrifuge tubes. All samples were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 5 min at room temperature. The supernatant was discarded immediately, followed by a second period of centrifugation for 60 sec. The supernatant was decanted. To each protein pellet 500 µL of Copper Solution was added then vortexed. The addition of 1 mL of Working Colour Reagent was followed by an incubation period of 15-20 min at room temperature. The absorbance was measured at 480 nm using water as the blank. 27 2.10. Proteinprecipitation Proteins in cell lysates were precipitated to remove unwanted cellular debris for better separation of proteins during electrophoresis and/or to concentrate samples. A ProteoExtract® (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) protein precipitation kit was employed. The precipitant was added to the protein samples and left at -20C for at least 30 min. The mixture was centrifuged for 5 min at room temperature and the supernatant was discarded. The protein pellet was washed twice in the wash solution and centrifuged, the supernatant was discarded between washes. The pellet was left to dry in a laminar flow workstation for at least 30 min before the addition of rehydration buffer or lysis buffer. 2.11. Two‐DimensionalElectrophoresis 2.11.1. Firstdimension Three pH ranges were examined; a broad range pH 3-11 non-linear (3-11NL), an acidic range pH 4-7 and a basic range pH 6-11. Two methods of sample application were used, passive rehydration and cup loading. Sample application to pH 4-7 IPG strips was tested by passive rehydration and cup loading at the cathode. The pH 311 NL strips required passive rehydration of the samples. The rehydration buffer complemented the pI of the IPG strip used i.e. pH 4-7 rehydration buffer was used for pH 4-7 IPG strips. All ImmobilineTM DryStrip gels (pI 4-7, 6-11 and 3-11 NL), IPG buffers, reswelling tray and all components of the Multiphor II system (paper wicks, cups, electrodes, tank and power supply) were from GE Healthcare. 2.11.2. Samplepreparationforpassiverehydration To protein pellets for passive rehydration, 125 µL rehydration buffer (7 M urea, 2 M thiourea, 4% w/v CHAPS, 2% v/v IPG buffer (GE Healthcare), 2% w/v DTT (Merck) was added. This was left for 15 min before the sample was centrifuged. The sample was distributed over a 7 cm area in a well of an ImmobilineTM DryStrip Reswelling Tray, and an IPG strip was placed gel side down over the sample. This was covered with 3 mL of Plus One DryStrip Cover Oil (GE Healthcare) and left overnight. 2.11.3. Samplepreparationforcuploading The preparation of samples for cup loading at the cathode or anode utilized the same protocol with the exception of the rehydration buffer. The rehydration buffer for pH 6-11 IPG strips contained 2 M thiourea, 7 M urea, 2.5% w/v DTT, 2% w/v CHAPS, 28 0.2% v/v pH 6-11 IPG buffer, 10% v/v isopropanol (Merck), 5% v/v glycerol. The protein pellet was reconstituted in 100 µL of rehydration buffer. This was left for 15 min then centrifuged, and left overnight. 2.11.4. IsoelectricfocusingusingaMultiphorIIsystem For cup loaded samples, IPG strips were passively rehydrated the night before use, in 125 µL of rehydration buffer, see section 2.11.2. Rehydrated IPG strips were placed gel side up in a Mulitphor II IEF tank. Two paper wicks were soaked in 500 µL of ddH2O and placed over each end of the IPG strips. Electrodes were placed over the paper wicks. For cup loaded samples, cups were centred over the IPG strips before the tank was filled with Ondina oil (Shell, VIC, Australia). Cups were placed at the cathode or anode for focusing of pH 4-7 or pH 6-11 IPG strips respectively. For pH 6-11 IPG strips one paper wick was soaked in 500 µL of pH 6-11 rehydration buffer and placed at the cathode end. IPG strips were electrophoresed as stated in Table 2 using an Electrophoresis Power Supply-EPS 3500 XL. Table 2 - Settings of the Multiphor II system for isoelectric focusing using pH 3-11 NL, 4-7 or 6-11 IPG strips. Time (h:m) Step Voltage pH 4-7 and 3-11NL pH 6-11 1 200 0:01 0:01 2 3500 1:30 1:30 3 3500 1:30 1:05 2.11.5. Seconddimension‐SDSPAGE Prior to the second dimension of 2DE, IPG strips were reduced in 1% w/v DTT then subjected to alkylation (2.5% w/v IAA) in equilibration buffer (50 mM Tris pH 8.8, 6 M urea, 30% v/v glycerol, 2% w/v SDS), 15 min per incubation on a Platform Rocker (Bioline). The electrophoresis tank was prepared as described in section 2.7. The IPG strip was rinsed in the inner chamber, cut to fit within the well, and placed into the IPG well of a NuPAGE® 4-12% Novex Bis-Tris ZoomTM 1.0 mm IPG well gel. For reference purposes the anodic end of the IPG strip was placed closest to the 29 ladder lane. The gel was then electrophoresed at 120 V for 115 min. Gels were fixed, stained and scanned as described in section 2.8. 2.12. Proteinspotpicking,destainingofproteinspotsandtrypsindigestion Protein spots were manually excised from gels using a spot picker (OneTouch Plus Spot/Band picker PDM1.5, The Gel Company, San Francisco, CA). Each gel plug was placed into a separate well of a 96 well v-bottomed plate with 100 µ L of 20 mM ammonium bicarbonate and left overnight at 4ºC. An Ettan digester (GE Healthcare) was used for protein digestion. All solutions were made fresh and filtered through 0.2 µm membrane (Merck Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany). The digester software (version 1.10) method had a 3 phase wash cycle using 50 mM ammonium bicarbonate, high grade methanol (Merck): ddH2O 1:1 v/v, followed by a drying period of at least 60 min. After the drying cycle 50 ng of modified sequencing grade trypsin (Roche) per well was added in 20 mM ammonium bicarbonate to cleave proteins into peptides. The peptides were extracted from the gel plugs in 0.1% v/v TFA (Fluka), ACN (Merck):ddH2O 1:1 v/v and transferred to a new 96 well vbottomed plate and left to dry overnight. 2.13. PreparationofsamplesforMALDIMS/MS Digested peptides were mixed with fresh CHCA matrix solution (10 mg/mL CHCA (Sigma-Aldrich) in 0.25% v/v TFA. ACN: ddH2O 1:1 v/v) and spotted onto MALDI plates. For internal calibration of masses, 0.7 µL of Calibration Mixture 2 (Calmix 2) was added to the fresh matrix solution. Calmix 2 contains angiotensin I, ACTH (clip 1-17), ACTH (clip 18-39) and ACTH (clip 7-38) with the monoisotopic masses of 1,296.68, 2,093.08, 2,465.19 and 3,657.92. The digested peptides were mixed in CHCA matrix with Calmix 2 before spotting. For external calibration of masses aliquots of Calmix 2 in CHCA matrix were spotted separately on MALDI plates. 2.14. MALDITOF/TOFMS An AB SCIEX 5800 mass spectrometer was used to acquire mass spectra for protein identification. Before data collection, the acquisition, processing and interpretation methods were tested on calibration spots to check for trypsin and calibration mixture peaks. Subsequently, the MALDI plate was calibrated. All spectra were collected in positive ion mode. The plate was set with continuous stage motion. 30 The details of the acquisition methods used for MS and MS/MS collection are as follows. For MS data collection, the selected mass range was 800-4,000 Da with a focus mass of 1,800 Da. Two hundred laser shots were fired per sub-spectrum. Five sequential pass rounds of sub-spectra collection were required for acceptance. Subspectra were accepted when peaks had a signal to noise ratio (s/n) ≥ 4. The collective 1000 shots were merged to create one spectrum. For MS/MS data collection, collision induced dissociation (CID) was turned on, and air molecules filled the collision chamber. Acquiring spectra required 250 shots per sub-spectrum. Two rounds of sub-spectra accumulation were required to merge 500 shots per spectrum. All sub-spectra were accepted. The metastable suppressor was turned on. The processing method used required a minimum of three calibration peaks matched in each spectrum, and a mass tolerance of +/- 0.5 m/z. The interpretation method was used to link the MS data for MS/MS spectra collection. From the MS data, the strongest peaks were examined first. Ten precursor ions per spot were selected for further processing. There are three ways the plate can be calibrated; internal, external and default. The selected method of calibration was internal by adding calibrant to the matrix solution before mixing with samples. However, if calibration failed a default calibration method was used. In some cases, external calibration was used. 2.15. Proteinidentification Peptide masses were searched using MASCOT (Version 2.4.01, Boston, MA) against the S. cerevisiae UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot database (Version 20081216, and 405,506 sequences; 6,743 S. cerevisiae sequences) with the peptide mass tolerance set at 40 ppm. The search criteria included allowance for one missed trypsin cleavage, complete modification of cysteine by carbamidomethyl, and variable methionine oxidation. The criteria for a match included the number of peptides matched, sequence coverage and significance scores. For proteins that were poorly annotated sequences were additionally searched using BLAST. 31 2.16. GeneOntology The gene ontology (GO) website Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) was used for GO annotations of proteins using www.genome.jp/kegg/tool/map_pathway2.html. 2.17. Spectrophotometricassays Glucose and ethanol in cell culture supernatants were measured using spectrophotometric assays. A Cary spectrophotometer was used for all experiments. 2.17.1. Glucoseassay Glucose was measured using a glucose oxidase-peroxidase kit (Sigma-Aldrich) that coupled oxidation of glucose to H2O2 mediated oxidation of o-dianisidine. The volume of sample tested varied between conditions due to the glucose concentration. The supernatants of 0.2% and 0.5% glucose grown cells were diluted 100X, whilst the supernatants of the 2% glucose grown cells were diluted 1000X. Each set of assays included a media only blank and a glucose standard curve with 5-25 µg glucose. Reactions were started by addition of 660 µL of Assay Reagent then mixed by inversion and incubated at 37ºC for 30 min. Reactions were stopped by adding 590 µL of 6 M H2SO4 followed by measuring the absorbances at 540 nm. 2.17.2. Ethanolassay To measure the amount of ethanol produced by yeast cells an alcohol dehydrogenase ADH-NAD+ assay was used. Oxidation of ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase was coupled to the reduction of NAD+ to NADH. The ADH-NAD+ assay reagent was prepared by reconstituting ADH-NAD+ in pH 9.0 0.5 M glycine buffer. An ethanol standard was made by diluting absolute ethanol to give a 20 µmol/µL stock and creating a 0.05-0.2 µmol standard curve. Proteins were precipitated from yeast supernatants by adding equal volumes of 10% TCA and sample supernatants, 10 µL of this was used for analysis. The reaction was started by the addition of 1 mL of NAD-ADH reagent, inverting the samples followed by an incubation period of 60 min at 37ºC. Absorbances were measured at 340 nm. 2.18. DifferentialinGelElectrophoresis(DIGE) DIGE was used to compare the protein profiles of respiring and fermenting BY4741 cells. Cyanine (Cy) dye reagents were used for fluorescent labelling of samples for 32 comparative analysis. A protein concentration between 4-10 µg protein/µL was required for optimal Cy dye binding. For dilute protein samples, precipitation of protein was carried out to concentrate the sample (see section 2.10). However, instead of resuspending the protein pellet in rehydration buffer, a smaller volume of lysis buffer was added and protein concentrations were re-quantified (see section 2.9). For labelling, the pH of protein (10 µg) samples was adjusted by the addition of 1.5 M Tris to pH ≥ 8.5. A 1 mM working stock solution was made for each Cy dye in N, N-dimethylformamide (Sigma-Aldrich), and each solution was vortexed and briefly centrifuged (10 sec). The labelling scheme for randomisation of dye labelling is shown in Table 3. For consistency between gels, a control was made using all eight samples (5 µg 3% G2a + 5 µg 3% G2b + 5 µg 3% G2c + 5 µg 3% G2d + 5 µg 2% Da + 5 µg 2% Db + 5 µg 2% Dc + 5 µg 3% Dd) and divided evenly between each replicate (10 µg used). Samples were vortexed and centrifuged briefly (10 sec), before being left on ice in the dark for 30 min. The reaction was stopped by a 1 µL addition of 10 mM lysine, vortexed and centrifuged, and left for 15 min in the dark. Each sample set was then mixed together i.e. Cy2, Cy3 and Cy 5 labelled samples. This was then ready for protein precipitation as a clean-up step for preparation for the rehydration of samples for IEF (see section 2.10). Table 3 - The DIGE labeling design for the comparison of glucose (D) and glycerol (G) grown cells. The second letter (a-d) shows the replicate used. Gel number Cy 3 labelled Cy 5 labelled Cy 2 standard 1 10 µg 3% G a 10 µg 2% D c 10 µg pool of all 4 samples 2 10 µg 3% G b 10 µg 2% D d 10 µg pool of all 4 samples 3 10 µg 3% G c 10 µg 2% D a 10 µg pool of all 4 samples 4 10 µg 3% G d 10 µg 2% D b 10 µg pool of all 4 samples 2.19. Fluorescentscanning Gels containing Cy dye labelled samples were scanned immediately after SDS PAGE. Gel images were digitized using a Fujifilm Fluorescent Image Analyser FLA-5100 33 scanner (Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd, Tokyo, Japan) at 16 bits per pixel with a 50 µm pixel size at each Cy dye excitation wavelength (Table 4), at 600 V. Post-fluorescent scanning, the gels were stained with CBB G-250(see section 2.8). Acquired images were saved as .tiff files. Table 4 - Excitation wavelengths for each Cy dye and the type of emission filter used for each wavelength. Cyanine dye Wavelength (nm) Emission filter 2 473 BPB1/ 530DF20 3 532 BPG1/ 570DF20 5 635 DBR1/ R665 2.20. PreparationofgelimagesforDeCyderTManalysis Before the images were analyzed they were converted from .tiff files to .gel files using ImageQuant ToolsTM software (Version 2.2, Molecular Dynamics). The .gel files were used to create a dataset file using Fluorochrome separationTM software (Multicolour version 2.2, Molecular Dynamics). This overlayed the Cy 2, 3 and 5 images for each gel set, i.e. one data set per replicate was created. The dataset images were cropped using ImageQuant ToolsTM, for exclusion of excess Cy dye that accumulated at the bottom and sides of the gel. 2.21. DataanalysisusingDecyderTMsoftware The scanned images of the Cy dye labelled gels were analyzed using the DeCyderTM software (Version 6.5, GE Healthcare). Protein spots were matched to a master gel, the one with the most spots. Gels were set to identify 2,500 protein spots although some detected ‘spots’ were due to noise generated from streaking or excess dye providing false spots. Detected spots were assessed to differentiate between protein spots (curved peaks) from noise (sharp peaks). The determination of proteins that varied between substrate conditions was done using a Student’s t-test (p ≤ 0.01) and selecting a ≥ 2-fold change in protein abundance between samples. Protein abundances are log standardized by DeCyderTM software for comparative analysis. The degree of change of the standardized protein abundances between the conditions is represented by an average ratio. An average ratio greater or equal to a 34 2-fold change, positive or negative, is considered significant when using replicates of four (Karp & Lilley, 2005). The average ratio represents a change in protein abundance of one condition in relation to the other. To interpret changes in protein abundance for the glucose/glycerol experiment the degree of change was analyzed in relation to the glucose set. Therefore a positive average ratio indicates an increase in abundance in glucose and a negative ratio indicates an increase in protein abundance in the glycerol set. 35 3. Results 3.1. Growthanalysis S. cerevisiae divides by budding. The time it takes to create the daughter cell (budding/division time) is dependent on a number of factors such as the strain and growth conditions. S. cerevisiae naturally ferments when glucose is abundant. However, this yeast respires when grown on a non-fermentable carbon source such as glycerol. The aim of this set of experiments was to examine the growth of BY4741 in glucose and glycerol for proteomic analysis. The growth of BY4741 in synthetic complete (SC) medium supplemented with glucose or glycerol as a carbon source is shown in Figure 8. The time taken for cell collection OD600 = 0.5 was approximately 14 h, the doubling time was 2 h 5 min. The second experiment was designed to examine growth of BY4741 in the nonfermentative carbon source glycerol (Figure 8 bottom). The time taken to reach an OD600 of 0.5 was approximately 45 h. The doubling time of BY4741 in 3% glycerol supplemented SC media was calculated as 9 h 41 min, approximately 5X slower than when cells were grown in glucose. Figure 9 shows the Log10 growth of S. cerevisiae in 2% glucose (top) or 3% glycerol (bottom). 36 1.2 1 OD 600 nm 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 5 10 ‐0.2 15 20 25 Time (h) 1.2 1 OD 600 nm 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 20 40 Time (h) 60 80 100 120 Figure 8 - Growth of BY4741 in 2% glucose (top) or 3% glycerol (bottom) and SC media. Aliquots of cultures were diluted (10X) and the absorbance was measured at 600 nm for glucose or glycerol grown cells. Cultures of BY4741 were grown in triplicate, error bars are standard deviations. 37 Figure 9 - Log10 growth curves of BY4747 in 2% glucose (top) or 3% glycerol (bottom) and SC media. Aliquots of cultures were diluted (10X) and the absorbance was measured at 600 nm for glucose or glycerol grown cells. Cultures of BY4741 were grown in triplicate, error bars are standard deviations. 38 3.2. Extractionprotocolsandoptimizationofseparationtechniquesfor2D analysisofaproteome Three sets of experiments were designed to develop protocols for proteome analysis of BY4741. The parameters that were examined include methods for protein extraction, pH ranges for IEF, and optimization of protein separation by the method of application of sample to IPG strips. 3.2.1. Proteinextraction The first experiment compared two extraction methods; disruption of cells by homogenization in lysis buffer (4% w/v CHAPS, 2 M thiourea, 7 M urea, 30 mM Tris pH 8.8) with quartz sand, and use of a protein extraction kit (GE Healthcare). The resulting protein profiles were analyzed by 1D SDS PAGE (Figure 10). The yeast cells were grown to stationary phase (OD ≥ 1) in 2% glucose in YP or SC media. The protein lysates produced using the kit protocol gave relatively few proteins > 55 kDa from BY4741 grown cultures in YP or SC media (Figure 10, lanes 2 and 3 respectively). The lysis buffer protocol gave better 1D SDS PAGE extraction profiles with proteins ranging from 6-200 kDa in both the YP or SC grown cells (Figure 10, lanes 4 and 5 respectively). 1 2 3 4 5 Figure 10 - Comparison of protein extraction methods analyzed by 1D SDS PAGE. The two methods used were lysis buffer (4% w/v CHAPS, 2 M thiourea, 7 M urea, 30 mM Tris pH 8.8) with quartz sand (Lanes 4 & 5), and a protein extraction kit (GE Healthcare) (Lanes 2 & 3); 10 µg of protein of each sample was used. Cells were grown in SCD (Lanes 2 & 4) or YPD: media (Lanes 3 & 5). Lane 1 contained Invitrogen Mark12 ladder. 39 3.2.2. Separationofyeastproteinsby2DEusingdifferentpHrangeson7cmgels A broad pH range of 3-11 NL (Figure 11, top) and two overlapping linear ranges pH 4-7 and 6-11 (Figure 11, bottom left and right, respectively) were used. Although loaded with the same amount of protein 2DE using pH 3-11 NL IPG strips in the first dimension gave less protein spots than the overlapping pH 4-7 and 6-11 ranges. Figure 11 - Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis using three different 7 cm gradients for IEF. The gradients used were pH 3-11NL (top) and 4-7 and 6-11 (bottom; left and right). The Invitrogen Mark12 ladder was used as a molecular weight marker. Twenty micrograms of protein was loaded to each gel. 40 3.2.3. Optimizationof2Dgels This experiment focused on improving the separation of proteins in the first dimension by comparing methods for sample application to IPG strips and the effect of protein precipitation. Figure 12 shows 2DE on 7 cm SDS PAGE gels. Three sample application methods were examined using precipitated protein (left column) in comparison to nonprecipitated proteins (right column). Sample application by passive rehydration (top row) and cup loading at the cathode (middle row) on pH 4-7 IPG strips, and cup loading at the anode (bottom row) for pH 6-11 IPG strips were compared. During passive rehydration, samples are absorbed by the IPG strip overnight. In contrast, cup loading of protein at either the cathode or anode is a process where the sample is applied directly to the IPG strip during IEF. The method of cup loading of sample at the cathode was discarded due to loss of proteins in the mid pH range using either precipitated or non-precipitated protein samples (Figure 12, middle). Passive rehydration of sample for the separation of pH 4-7 proteins was therefore selected, and cup loading at the anode was used for focusing of basic proteins on pH 6-11 IPG strips. Protein precipitation was used for all subsequent sample preparations. 41 Figure 12 - Optimization of IEF. The experiment compared precipitated (left) against non-precipitated (right) protein samples. The first row are samples that were passively rehydrated, the middle row shows samples that were cup loaded at the cathode, and the bottom row shows samples which were cup loaded at the anode on a pH 6-11 gradient. The ladder used for molecular weight reference was Mark 12. Twenty micrograms of protein was used for each gel. 42 3.3. Proteinidentification Analysis by 2D-DIGE typically requires small amounts (5 µg) of protein per sample for optimal binding of the Cy dye reagents. However, for the identification of proteins from gels, larger amounts of protein are often required. For the reference proteome experiment 100 µg of protein from cells grown in 2% glucose in SC media was analyzed. 3.3.1. 2DanalysisofpI4‐7proteins The protein profile of BY4741 separated on a pH 4-7 IPG strip is shown in Figure 13. The horizontal axis displays the isoelectric range of the pH gradient (first dimension) and the vertical axis, separation on the basis of size. The 2D gel image shows 232 proteins visible by Coomassie staining that were selected for MALDI mass fingerprinting. Significant identifications required a match with a MASCOT score greater than 56 at p ≤ 0.05. A total of 109 proteins were identified at the 5% level of significance (Table 5). Of these, 70 unique protein identifications were found. Thirty-nine identifications accounted for proteins with multiple spots or protein isoforms. Proteins with multiple spots include Adh1, Eno1, Eno2, Gdh1, Hsp82, Hxk2, Pdc1, Pdi1, Psa1, Rps12, Ssa1, Ssa2, Ssb2 and Vma2. Isoforms of proteins included Ade13, Ade5,7, Bmh1, Bmh2, Eno1, Eno2, Hsp104, Hsp26, Hsp60, Hsp82, Rps0A, Rps12, Rps21A, Rps5, Ssa1, Ssa2, Ssb1, Ssb2, Tif2, Tif6, Tub1, Tub2,Vma2, Vma4, Vma6 and Vma7. Of particular interest were the six glycolytic enzymes (Eno1, Eno2, Gdh1, Hxk2, Pdc1 and Pdi1) and Adh1 (alcohol dehydrogenase) present in multiple spots and isoforms. Table 5 summarizes each protein that was matched including protein name, mass, isoelectric point, sequence length and coverage, subcellular localization, information about function and identity, GI and accession numbers. The last column, second matched protein, represents the first non-homologous protein match. 43 44 Figure 13 - The 2D gel image of the protein profile of S. cerevisiae BY4741 separated on a pH 4-7 linear gradient (horizontal axis). Separated proteins (100 µg) were stained with Coomassie, and identified proteins are marked with an arrow. Numbers correspond to Table 5. The ladder used for molecular weight reference was Rainbow 851. Table 5 - Summary of identified BY4741 proteins by MALDI mass spectrometry and separated by 2DE using a pH 4-7 gradient. Proteins (score ≥ 56, p ≤ 0.05) are alphabetized by gene name. The score and sequence coverage (%) values are representative of the significance of the match generated by the MASCOT search. The calculated mass, pI, GI, accession number and description of the protein were gathered from the NCBI protein website. The subcellular localization of the protein was found using Uniprot. The next matched protein was the next non-homologous protein matched. The spot position was cross checked with the calculated pI and Mr values. Differences between observed and predicted mass and / or pI are labeled A: acidic shift or B: basic shift in pI and/or I: increase or D: decrease in Mr. Spot No 177 IA 60D Gene name ABP1 ACT1 Mass [kDa] 65.59 41.89 pI [pH] 4.59 5.44 Sequence length [AA] 592 375 Score 178 246 Sequence Coverage [%] 21 19 GI No. gi|6319931 gi|14318479 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_010012 NP_116614 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm > cytoskeleton > actin patch Actin-binding protein of the cortical actin cytoskeleton, important for activation of the Arp2/3 complex that plays a key role actin in cytoskeleton organization. AWRI1631_ 160620, gi|20734070 7 (33) Cytoplasm > cytoskeleton Actin, structural protein involved in cell polarization, endocytosis, and other cytoskeletal functions. (-) 45 46 Spot No 26B Gene name ADE13 Mass [kDa] 54.7 pI [pH] 6.01 Sequence length [AA] 482 Score 139 Sequence Coverage [%] 24 GI No. gi|6323391 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_013463 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Unknown Adenylosuccinate lyase catalyzes two steps in the 'de novo' purine nucleotide biosynthetic pathway; expression is repressed by adenine and activated by Bas1p and Pho2p. Erp6p, gi|6321436 (25) Pau9p, gi|13129151 (36) 190 ADE5,7 86.35 5.08 802 174 15 gi|6321203 NP_011280 Cytoplasm Bifunctional enzyme of the 'de novo' purine nucleotide biosynthetic pathway contains aminoimidazoleribotide synthetase and glycinamideribotide synthetase activities. 9B ADH1 37.15 6.21 347 295 26 gi|112491285 2HCY_A (NP_014555) Cytoplasm Chain A, Alcohol dehydrogenase I, fermentative enzyme. Cdc53p, gi|6320070 (30) 10B ADH1 37.15 6.21 347 116 23 gi|112491285 2HCY_A (NP_014555) Cytoplasm Chain A, Alcohol dehydrogenase I. (-) 31D ADH1 37.15 6.21 347 64 17 gi|112491285 2HCY_A (NP_014555) Cytoplasm Chain A, Alcohol dehydrogenase I. (-) Spot No 44I 201B Gene name ADK1 ALD6 Mass [kDa] 24.29 54.77 pI [pH] 5.98 5.31 Sequence length [AA] 222 500 Score 101 199 Sequence Coverage [%] 18 30 GI No. gi|6320432 gi|6325196 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) NP_010512 Cytoplasm Mitochondrion intermembrane space Adenylate kinase, required for purine metabolism; lacks cleavable signal sequence. (-) Cytoplasm Aldehyde dehydrogenase, activated by Mg2+ and utilizes NADP+ as the preferred coenzyme; required for conversion of acetaldehyde to acetate; constitutively expressed; locates to the mitochondrial outer surface upon oxidative stress BSC4, gi|17096302 3 (27) Pau9p, gi|13129151 (36) Igo1p, gi|6324172 (29) NP_015264 B ARO8 56.37 5.68 500 149 9 gi|6321236 NP_011313 Cytoplasm Aromatic aminotransferase I, expression is regulated by general control of amino acid biosynthesis. 81 ATP2 51.09 5.11 478 85 24 gi|119389907 2HLD_D (NP_012655) Mitochondrion Chain D, Mitochondrial F1-Atpase 220D 47 48 Spot No 128 I Gene name BMH1 Mass [kDa] 30.18 pI [pH] 4.82 Sequence length [AA] 267 Score 92 Sequence Coverage [%] 12 GI No. gi|6321025 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_011104 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Nucleus Plasma membrane 14-3-3 protein, major isoform; controls proteome at posttranscriptional level, binds proteins and DNA, involved in regulation of many processes including exocytosis, vesicle transport, Ras/MAPK signaling, and rapamycinsensitive signaling. AWRI1631_ 141000, gi|20734187 8 (28) Pau9p, gi|13129151 (23) SCY_2605, gi|15194323 4 (31) 127I BMH2 30.97 4.82 273 328 35 gi|151942087 EDN60443 (NP_010384) Cytoplasm Nucleus 14-3-3 protein, minor isoform; controls proteome at posttranscriptional level, binds proteins and DNA, involved in regulation of many processes including exocytosis, vesicle transport, Ras/MAPK signaling, and rapamycinsensitive signaling. 185B CCT5 61.17 5.31 551 59 9 gi|567930 AAA53132 (NP_012598) Cytoplasm TCP1 Spot No 173 IB 110 1I D Gene name CDC48 COF1 CPR1 Mass [kDa] 92.16 15.94 17.49 pI [pH] 4.82 5.05 6.9 Sequence length [AA] 835 143 162 Score 65 108 309 Sequence Coverage [%] 13 36 37 GI No. gi|6320077 gi|6322978 gi|6320359 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_010157 NP_013050 NP_010439 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) ER Microsome ATPase involved in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation; Cdc48pNpl4p-Ufd1p complex participates in ERassociated degradation (ERAD) while Cdc48pNpl4p-Vms1p complex participates in mitochondria-associated degradation (MAD). YKR101Wplike protein, gi|20734331 1 (29) Cytoplasm >cytoskeleton Nucleus Cofilin, promotes actin filament depolarization in a pH-dependent manner; binds both actin monomers and filaments and severs filaments; thought to be regulated by phosphorylation at SER4; ubiquitous and essential in eukaryotes. Unnamed protein product, gi|4772 (27) Cytoplasm Peptidyl-prolylcis-trans isomerase (cyclophilin), catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of peptide bonds N-terminal to proline residues; binds the drug cyclosporin A. Gas2p, gi|6323375 (35) 49 50 Spot No 11 DB 19IB 197IB Gene name CYS3 DPS1 EFT2 Mass [kDa] 42.51 63.64 93.68 pI [pH] 6.06 6.16 5.92 Sequence length [AA] 394 557 842 Score 277 385 234 Sequence Coverage [%] 20 38 20 GI No. gi|6319307 gi|6323011 gi|6320593 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_009390 NP_013083 NP_010673 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Cystathionine gammalyase catalyzes one of the two reactions involved in the transsulfuration pathway that yields cysteine from homocysteine with the intermediary formation of cystathionine. Unnamed protein product, gi|4025 (35) Cytoplasm Aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, primarily cytoplasmic; homodimeric enzyme that catalyzes the specific aspartylation of tRNA (Asp); class II aminoacyl tRNA synthetase; binding to its own mRNA may confer autoregulation. Ade17p, gi|6323768 (51) Cytoplasm Elongation factor 2 (EF2), also encoded by EFT1; catalyzes ribosomal translocation during protein synthesis; contains diphthamide, the unique posttranslationally modified histidine residue specifically ADPribosylated by diphtheria toxin. Type 2C protein phosphatase , gi|11536165 1 (31) Spot No 17IB 15IB 224IB Gene name ENO1 ENO1 ENO2 Mass [kDa] 46.84 46.65 46.94 pI [pH] 6.16 6.04 5.67 Sequence length [AA] 437 436 437 Score 131 243 371 Sequence Coverage [%] 7 26 37 GI No. gi|6321693 gi|157830958 gi|6321968 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_011770 1ELS_A (NP_011770) NP_012044 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Enolase I, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is repressed in response to glucose. Cor1p, gi|6319426 (52) Cytoplasm Chain A, Catalytic Metal Ion Binding In EnolaseMn2+Phosphonoacetohydroxa mate Complex Chain A, 3Phosphoglyc erate Kinase, Mutation R65q. (69) Cytoplasm Phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Pyruvate kinase, gi|4180 (76) 51 52 Spot No 41 DB 42DB Gene name ENO2 ENO2 Mass [kDa] 46.94 46.94 pI [pH] 5.67 5.67 Sequence length [AA] 437 437 Score 196 146 Sequence Coverage [%] 16 8 GI No. gi|6321968 gi|6321968 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012044 NP_012044 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. AWRI1631_ 133840, gi|20734212 2 (24) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Ics2p, gi|30267748 (30) Spot No 51IB 162 B Gene name ENO2 Mass [kDa] 46.94 pI [pH] 5.67 Sequence length [AA] 437 Score 139 Sequence Coverage [%] 15 GI No. gi|6321968 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012044 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Chain A, Mata1MATA LPHA2-3a Heterodimer Bound To DNA, gi|21466066 (42) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Hypothetical protein YDL124W, gi|6320079 (49) D ENO2 46.94 5.67 437 130 33 gi|6321968 NP_012044 53 54 Spot No 35DB 120D 98DA Gene name ENO2 FBA1 FPR1 Mass [kDa] 46.94 39.88 12.07 pI [pH] 5.67 5.51 5.71 Sequence length [AA] 437 359 113 Score 68 128 185 Sequence Coverage [%] 21 15 45 GI No. gi|6321968 gi|6322790 gi|157834293 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012044 NP_012863 1YAT_A (NP_014264) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Tal1p, gi|6323386 (42) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Fructose-1,6bisphosphate aldolase, required for glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; catalyzes conversion of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate to glyceraldehyde-3-P and dihydroxyacetone-P; locates to mitochondrial outer surface upon oxidative stress. Acp1p, gi|6322656 (30) Cytoplasm Chain A, Improved Calcineurin Inhibition By Yeast Fkbp12-Drug Complexes Kelch repeatcontaining protein 1, gi|19040593 6 (35) Spot No 157 77 I IB 76IB 221B Gene name FUR1 Mass [kDa] 24.86 pI [pH] 5.58 Sequence length [AA] 216 Score 280 Sequence Coverage [%] 60 GI No. Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Intracellular Cytoplasm Nucleus Glutamate dehydrogenase. AWRI1631_ 41590, gi|20734697 5 (26) Cytoplasm Nucleus Glutamate dehydrogenase (-) Cytoplasm Plasma membrane Glucokinase catalyzes the phosphorylation of glucose at C6 in the first irreversible step of glucose metabolism; one of three glucose phosphorylating enzymes; expression regulated by non-fermentable carbon sources. (-) 5.55 453 129 22 gi|171594 GDH1 49.89 5.55 453 68 22 gi|171594 AAA34642 (NP_015020) 500 93 28 YNR045Wplike protein, gi|20734154 1 (32) NP_011996 49.89 5.8 Next match, GI No. (score) gi|37362660 GDH1 55.74 Description Uracil phosphoribosyl transferase, synthesizes UMP from uracil; involved in the pyrimidine salvage pathway. AAA34642 (NP_015020) GLK1 Subcellular localization gi|6319809 NP_009890 55 56 Spot No 34B 16 B 24IB Gene name GLN1 GND1 GUA1 Mass [kDa] 42.13 54.91 58.73 pI [pH] 5.92 6.44 6.05 Sequence length [AA] 370 497 525 Score 83 598 128 Sequence Coverage [%] 18 29 16 GI No. gi|417061 gi|157835612 gi|6323873 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) P32288 (NP_015360.2) 2P4Q_A (NP_012053) NP_013944 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Glutamine synthetase (GS), synthesizes glutamine from glutamate and ammonia; with Glt1p, forms the secondary pathway for glutamate biosynthesis from ammonia; expression regulated by nitrogen source and by amino acid limitation. (-) Cytoplasm Chain A, Gnd1. YPL083Cplike protein, gi|20734053 4 (30) Cytoplasm GMP synthase, an enzyme that catalyzes the second step in the biosynthesis of GMP from inosine 5'-phosphate (IMP); transcription is not subject to regulation by guanine but is negatively regulated by nutrient starvation. Cdc19p, gi|6319279 (59) Spot No 12IB Gene name HOM2 Mass [kDa] 40.03 pI [pH] 6.27 Sequence length [AA] 365 Score 88 Sequence Coverage [%] 26 GI No. gi|6320362 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) NP_010442 Cytoplasm Nucleus Plasma membrane Aspartic beta semialdehyde dehydrogenase catalyzes the second step in the common pathway for methionine and threonine biosynthesis; expression regulated by Gcn4p and the general control of amino acid synthesis. Alcohol dehydrogen ase isozyme I, gi|223142 (59) Interacts with HRR25. May interact with SEC72. Unnamed protein product, gi|4291 (42) HRI1 27.54 5.1 244 163 26 gi|6323332 NP_013404 Cytoplasm Nucleus B HSC82 80.82 4.76 705 591 22 gi|171723 AAA02813 (NP_013911) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Hsc82 protein. Bdh2p, gi|6319257 (33) 228I HSP104 102.4 6 5.62 908 94 16 gi|228154 1717391A (NP_013074) Cytoplasm Nucleus Protein Hsp104. Pau9p, gi|13129151 (35) 119 IB 176D 57 58 Spot No 125I 168 A 175 I 174I Gene name HSP26 HSP60 Mass [kDa] 23.86 60.99 pI [pH] 5.31 5.23 Sequence length [AA] 214 572 Score 58 114 Sequence Coverage [%] 31 25 HSP82 77.92 5.06 677 344 15 HSP82 77.92 5.06 677 109 10 GI No. gi|6319546 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_009628 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Nucleus Small heat shock protein (sHSP) with chaperone activity; forms hollow, sphere-shaped oligomers that suppress unfolded proteins aggregation; oligomer activation requires heat-induced conformational change; also has mRNA binding activity. Mrpl38p, gi|6322678 (23) Mitochondrion matrix Tetradecameric mitochondrial chaperonin required for ATPdependent folding of precursor polypeptides and complex assembly; prevents aggregation and mediates protein refolding after heat shock; role in mtDNA transmission; phosphorylated. Conserved protein, gi|15194375 7 (24) YNR045Wplike protein, gi|20734154 1 (29) (-) gi|6323288 NP_013360 gi|99031945 2CG9_A (NP_015084) Cytoplasm Chain A, Hsp90-Sba1 closed chaperone complex. 2CG9_A (NP_015084) Cytoplasm Chain A, Hsp90-Sba1 closed chaperone complex. gi|99031945 Spot No 187B 82 Gene name HXK2 HXK2 Mass [kDa] 54.13 54.16 pI [pH] 5.16 5.16 Sequence length [AA] 486 486 Score 226 83 Sequence Coverage [%] 35 24 GI No. gi|6321184 gi|3793 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_011261 CAA27203 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Nucleus Hexokinase 2 catalyzes phosphorylation of glucose in the Cytoplasm; predominant hexokinase during growth on glucose; functions in the nucleus to repress expression of HXK1 and GLK1 and to induce expression of its own gene Stressseventy subfamily A protein, gi|15194114 6 (173) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Nucleus Hexokinase 2 catalyzes phosphorylation of glucose in the Cytoplasm; predominant hexokinase during growth on glucose; functions in the nucleus to repress expression of HXK1 and GLK1 and to induce expression of its own gene. (-) 59 60 Spot No 178 222IB Gene name KAR2 LYS21 Mass [kDa] 74.47 49.02 pI [pH] 4.79 5.88 Sequence length [AA] 682 440 Score 432 61 Sequence Coverage [%] 24 17 GI No. gi|6322426 gi|6320071 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012500 NP_010151 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) ER lumen ATPase involved in protein import into the ER, also acts as a chaperone to mediate protein folding in the ER and may play a role in ER export of soluble proteins; regulates the unfolded protein response via interaction with Ire1p. (-) Mitochondrion Homocitrate synthase isozyme, catalyzes the condensation of acetylCoA and alphaketoglutarate to form homocitrate, which is the first step in the lysine biosynthesis pathway; highly similar to the other isozyme, Lys20p. (-) Spot No 18IB 155IB Gene name OYE2 PAA1 Mass [kDa] 44.98 22.04 pI [pH] 6.13 5.58 Sequence length [AA] 400 191 Score 88 169 Sequence Coverage [%] 25 12 GI No. gi|6321973 gi|6320276 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012049 NP_010356 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Nucleus Conserved NADPH oxidoreductase containing flavin mononucleotide (FMN), homologous to Oye3p with different ligand binding and catalytic properties; may be involved in sterol metabolism, oxidative stress response, and programmed cell death. (-) Cytoplasm Polyamine acetyltransferase; acetylates polyamines (e.g. putrescine, spermidine, spermine) and also aralkylamines (e.g. tryptamine, phenylethylamine); may be involved in transcription and/or DNA replication Tif2p, gi|6322323 (39) 61 62 Spot No 217D B 218D Gene name PDC1 Mass [kDa] 61.68 pI [pH] 5.8 Sequence length [AA] 563 Score 190 Sequence Coverage [%] 28 GI No. Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Major of three pyruvate decarboxylase isozymes, key enzyme in alcoholic fermentation, decarboxylates pyruvate to acetaldehyde; subject to glucose-, ethanol-, and autoregulation; involved in amino acid catabolism. YGR087Cplike protein, gi|20734515 1 (55) gi|6323073 NP_013145 Cytoplasm Nucleus Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, Pyruvate decarboyxlase (Form B) complexed with pyruvamide. (-) B PDC1 61.68 5.8 563 370 18 gi|7245976 1QPB_A (NP_013145) 215B PDC1 61.68 5.8 563 135 11 gi|7245976 1QPB_A (NP_013145) Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, Pyruvate decarboxylase complexed with pyruvamide. (-) Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, Pyruvate decarboxylase complexed with pyruvamide. Unnamed protein product, gi|4114 (42) 219D B PDC1 61.68 5.8 563 117 15 gi|7245976 1QPB_A (NP_013145) 27DB PDC1 61.68 5.8 563 110 15 gi|7245976 1QPB_A (NP_013145) Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, Pyruvate decarboxylase complexed with pyruvamide. (-) PDC1 61.68 5.8 563 80 8 gi|7245976 1QPB_A (NP_013145) Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, Pyruvate decarboxylase complexed with pyruvamide. (-) 216D B Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No. Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) 158IA PDI1 56.67 4.38 504 172 26 gi|88192228 2B5E_A (NP_009887) ER lumen Chain A, Disulfide isomerase. SCY_2605, gi|15194323 4 (24) 159IA PDI1 56.67 4.38 504 149 21 gi|88192228 2B5E_A (NP_009887) ER lumen Chain A, Disulfide Isomerase. Tex1p, gi|6324076 (33) Ups3p, gi|6320391 (31) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) 200IB PFK2 105.1 3 6.09 959 71 7 gi|172140 AAA34860 (NP_013932) Cytoplasm Phosphofructokinase, a key regulatory enzyme in glycolysis, catalyzes the phosphorylation of fructose-6-phosphate to fructose-1,6-biphosphate. 13IB PGK1 44.6 6.73 415 167 16 gi|157833610 1QPG_A (NP_009938) Cytoplasm Chain A, 3Phosphoglycerate kinase, mutation R65q. (-) Cytoplasm Mannose-6-phosphate isomerase, catalyzes the interconversion of fructose-6-P and mannose-6-P; required for early steps in protein mannosylation Enolase II, gi|6321968 (82) 223IB PMI40 48.44 5.66 429 235 14 gi|6320839 NP_010918 63 64 Spot No 164D B 30DB 29 DB Gene name PRB1 PSA1 PSA1 Mass [kDa] 69.8 39.71 39.71 pI [pH] 5.94 5.95 5.95 Sequence length [AA] 635 361 361 Score 75 254 172 Sequence Coverage [%] 5 29 19 GI No. gi|6320775 gi|6320148 gi|6320148 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_010854 NP_010228 NP_010228 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Vacuole Vacuolar proteinase B (yscB), a serine protease of the subtilisin family; involved in protein degradation in the vacuole and required for full protein degradation during sporulation; activity inhibited by Pbi2p. YGL002W, gi|51013601 (29) Cytoplasm GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase (mannose-1-phosphate guanyltransferase), synthesizes GDPmannose from GTP and mannose-1-phosphate in cell wall biosynthesis; required for normal cell wall structure. Chain B, Cytochrome Bc1 Complex (130) Cytoplasm GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase (mannose-1-phosphate guanyltransferase), synthesizes GDPmannose from GTP and mannose-1-phosphate in cell wall biosynthesis; required for normal cell wall structure Unknown protein, gi|808836 (36) Spot No 153IB 161I 139IA Gene name PST2 RNA1 RPS0A Mass [kDa] 21.01 46.07 20.37 pI [pH] 5.46 4.53 9.66 Sequence length [AA] 198 407 185 Score 96 107 100 Sequence Coverage [%] 24 19 27 GI No. gi|6320235 gi|6323891 gi|49258822 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_010315 NP_013962 1S1H_B (NP_011730) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Secreted Protein with similarity to members of a family of flavodoxin-like proteins; induced by oxidative stress in a Yap1p dependent manner; the authentic, non-tagged protein is detected in highly purified mitochondria in highthroughput studies. Tsa1p, gi|6323613 (49) Cytoplasm GTPase activating protein (GAP) for Gsp1p, involved in nuclear transport. Ubiquitin carboxylterminal hydrolase 7, gi|19040636 7 (41) Cytoplasm Chain B, Ribosomal 80sEef2-Sordarin complex obtained by docking atomic models for RNA and protein components into a 11.7 A Cryo-Em Map. Ics2p, gi|30267748 (19) 65 66 Spot No 104D A 105D A 97DA 7IA Gene name RPS12 RPS12 RPS21A RPS5 Mass [kDa] 15.46 15.46 9.79 25.08 pI [pH] 4.68 4.68 5.76 8.63 Sequence length [AA] 143 143 87 225 Score 103 94 88 126 Sequence Coverage [%] 24 12 74 28 GI No. gi|6324945 gi|6324945 gi|6322910 gi|6322583 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_015014 NP_015014 NP_012983 NP_012657 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; has similarity to rat ribosomal protein S12. Ptc1p, gi|642800 (34) Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; has similarity to rat ribosomal protein S12. Predicted protein, gi|19040578 9 (36) Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; nearly identical to Rps21Bp and has similarity to rat S21 ribosomal protein. Eno2p, gi|6321968 (70) Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, the least basic of the non-acidic ribosomal proteins; phosphorylated in vivo; essential for viability; has similarity to E. coli S7 and rat S5 ribosomal proteins. Fmp25p, gi|6323106 (35) Spot No 95 I 36B 86I Gene name RPT5 SAH1 SAM1 Mass [kDa] 48.28 49.72 42.07 pI [pH] 4.93 5.83 5.04 Sequence length [AA] 434 449 382 Score 207 274 188 Sequence Coverage [%] 27 30 16 GI No. gi|6324691 gi|6320882 gi|6323209 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_014760 NP_010961 NP_013281 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Nucleus One of six ATPases of the 19S regulatory particle of the 26S proteasome involved in the degradation of ubiquitinated substrates; recruited to the GAL1-10 promoter region upon induction of transcription; similar to human TBP1 YOR117Wplike protein, gi|20734115 3 (198) Cytoplasm S-adenosyl-Lhomocysteine hydrolase, catabolizes S-adenosyl-Lhomocysteine, which is formed after donation of the activated methyl group of S-adenosyl-Lmethionine (AdoMet) to an acceptor. Silent mating loci repressor, gi|15194164 1 (30) Cytoplasm S-adenosylmethionine synthetase, catalyzes transfer of the adenosyl group of ATP to the sulfur atom of methionine; one of two differentially regulated isozymes (Sam1p and Sam2p). (-) 67 68 Spot No 118A 43 IB Gene name SEC53 SOD1 Mass [kDa] 29.21 15.85 pI [pH] 5.14 5.48 Sequence length [AA] 254 153 Score 228 264 Sequence Coverage [%] 51 60 GI No. Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) SCY_2344, gi|15194415 9 (39) gi|14318474 NP_116609 Cytoplasm Phosphomannomutase involved in synthesis of GDP-mannose and dolichol-phosphatemannose; required for folding and glycosylation of secretory proteins in the ER lumen. gi|6730103 1B4T_A (NP_012638) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion intermembrane space Chain A, H48c Cu(Ii)Zn superoxide dismutase. Unnamed protein product (40) Tetrameric tRNA splicing endonucleas e 54 kDa subunit, gi|19040787 2 (36) (-) 65 SPE3 33.53 5.33 293 62 15 gi|6325326 NP_015394 Cytoplasm Nucleus Spermidine synthase, involved in biosynthesis of spermidine and also in biosynthesis of pantothenic acid; spermidine is required for growth of wild-type cells. 93 SRP1 59.46 4.8 530 126 14 gi|58177142 1WA5_B (NP_014210) Cytoplasm perinuclear region Chain B, Exportin Cse1p complexed with its cargo (Kap60p) and Rangtp. Spot No 180 188IB 179 Gene name SSA1 SSA1 SSA2 Mass [kDa] 69.78 69.78 69.59 pI [pH] 5 5 4.95 Sequence length [AA] 642 642 639 Score 1130 60 1100 Sequence Coverage [%] 36 15 35 GI No. gi|144228166 gi|144228166 gi|6323004 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_009396 NP_009396 NP_013076 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm ATPase involved in protein folding and nuclear localization signal (NLS)-directed nuclear transport; member of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family; forms a chaperone complex with Ydj1p. (-) Cytoplasm Cell wall ATPase involved in protein folding and nuclear localization signal (NLS)-directed nuclear transport; member of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family; forms a chaperone complex with Ydj1p. (-) Cytoplasm ATP binding protein involved in protein folding and vacuolar import of proteins; member of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family; associated with the chaperonin-containing Tcomplex. Unnamed protein product. gi|3788 (32) 69 70 Spot No 116D A 209 210 Gene name SSA2 SSB1 SSB2 Mass [kDa] 69.59 66.73 66.66 pI [pH] 4.95 5.32 5.37 Sequence length [AA] 639 613 613 Score 182 173 775 Sequence Coverage [%] 6 30 39 GI No. gi|6323004 gi|6319972 gi|6324120 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_013076 NP_010052 NP_014190 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Cell wall ATP binding protein involved in protein folding and vacuolar import of proteins; member of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family; associated with the chaperonin-containing Tcomplex. Pau9p, gi|13129151 (35) Cytoplasm ATPase that is a ribosome-associated molecular chaperone, functions with J-protein partner Zuo1p; may be involved in folding of newly-made polypeptide chains; member of the HSP70 family; interacts with phosphatase subunit Reg1p (-) Cytoplasm ATPase that is a ribosome-associated molecular chaperone, functions with J-protein partner Zuo1p; may be involved in the folding of newly-synthesized polypeptide chains; member of the HSP70 family; homolog of SSB1. (-) Spot No 211D B 189 A 191B Gene name SSB2 SSC1 SSE1 Mass [kDa] 66.66 70.58 77.6 pI [pH] 5.37 5.48 5.12 Sequence length [AA] 613 654 693 Score 275 132 835 Sequence Coverage [%] 15 16 36 GI No. gi|6324120 gi|6322505 gi|6325151 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_014190 NP_012579 NP_015219 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm ATPase that is a ribosome-associated molecular chaperone, functions with J-protein partner Zuo1p; may be involved in the folding of newly-synthesized polypeptide chains; member of the HSP70 family; homolog of SSB1. (-) Mitochondrion Nucleus Hsp70 family ATPase, constituent of the import motor component of the Translocase of the Inner Mitochondrial membrane (TIM23 complex); involved in protein translocation and folding; subunit of SceI endonuclease. AWRI1631_ 41900, gi|20734693 4 (33) Cytoplasm ATPase that is a component of the heat shock protein Hsp90 chaperone complex; binds unfolded proteins; member of the heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family. Pleiotropic drug resistance protein, gi|15194431 5 (32) 71 72 Spot No 96 IA 5DB 181D Gene name SUP45 TDH3 TFP1 Mass [kDa] 48.55 35.83 68.02 pI [pH] 5.01 6.46 5.17 Sequence length [AA] 432 332 617 Score 89 59 536 Sequence Coverage [%] 7 7 33 GI No. gi|468605 gi|6321631 gi|3417405 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) CAA51935 NP_011708 CAA98761 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Directs the termination of nascent peptide synthesis (translation) in response to the termination codons UAA, UAG and UGA YOR117Wplike protein, gi|20734115 3 (29) Cytoplasm Glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase, isozyme 3, involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; tetramer that catalyzes the reaction of glyceraldehyde-3phosphate to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate. (-) Golgi Vacuolar membranes V/A-type ATP synthase catalytic subunit A. These ATPases couple ATP hydrolysis to the buildup of a H+ gradient, but Vtype ATPases do not catalyze the reverse reaction. YOL038C-A, gi|33438876 (32) Spot No 147 Gene name TIF2 Mass [kDa] 44.84 pI [pH] 5.02 Sequence length [AA] 395 Score 139 Sequence Coverage [%] 12 GI No. gi|6322323 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_012397 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Translation initiation factor eIF4A, identical to Tif1p; DEA (D/H)-box RNA helicase that couples ATPase activity to RNA binding and unwinding; forms a dumbbell structure of two compact domains connected by a linker; interacts with eIF4G. YML070Wplike protein, gi|20734253 7 (21) YCR051W, gi|6319899 (56) (-) 131I TIF6 26.66 4.54 245 204 31 gi|6325273 NP_015341 Cytoplasm Nucleus > nucleolus Constituent of 66S preribosomal particles, has similarity to human translation initiation factor 6 (eIF6); may be involved in the biogenesis and or stability of 60S ribosomal subunits 21I TKL1 73.8 6.48 680 78 8 gi|3212468 1AY0_A (NP_015399) Cytoplasm Chain A, Identification of catalytically important residues in transketolase. 73 74 Spot No 106 IA 45IB 129 Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No. Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Protein that associates with ribosomes; homolog of translationally controlled tumor protein; green fluorescent protein (GFP)-fusion protein localizes to the cytoplasm and relocates to the mitochondrial outer surface upon oxidative stress. Conserved protein, gi|15194110 5 (27) TMA19 18.78 4.41 167 332 32 gi|6322794 NP_012867 Cytoplasm Mitochondrion TPI1 26.76 5.75 247 181 21 gi|230405 1YPI_A (NP_010335) Mitochondrion Chain A, Triosephosphate isomerase N1311, gi|600049 (32) Cytoplasm > cytoskeleton Major isoform of tropomyosin; binds to and stabilizes actin cables and filaments, which direct polarized cell growth and the distribution of several organelles; acetylated by the NatB complex and acetylated form binds actin most efficiently YOL024W, gi|6324549 (21) TPM1 23.52 4.58 199 197 53 gi|6324250 NP_014320 Spot No 115I 88I 94 Gene name TSA1 TUB1 TUB2 Mass [kDa] 21.69 50.39 51.23 pI [pH] 5.03 4.96 4.64 Sequence length [AA] 196 447 457 Score 239 82 319 Sequence Coverage [%] 29 9 23 GI No. gi|6323613 gi|6323554 gi|14318481 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_013684 NP_013625 NP_116616 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Thioredoxin peroxidase, acts as both a ribosomeassociated and free cytoplasmic antioxidant; self-associates to form a high-molecular weight chaperone complex under oxidative stress; deletion results in mutator phenotype YML028Wplike protein (144) Cytoplasm > cytoskeleton Alpha-tubulin; associates with beta-tubulin (Tub2p) to form tubulin dimer, which polymerizes to form microtubules. Q0130, gi|2133224 (26) Cytoplasm > cytoskeleton Beta-tubulin; associates with alpha-tubulin (Tub1p and Tub3p) to form tubulin dimer, which polymerizes to form microtubules. YKR101Wplike protein, gi|20734331 1 (33) 75 76 Spot No 154D B 89 Gene name VMA2 VMA2 Mass [kDa] 57.77 57.77 pI [pH] 4.95 4.95 Sequence length [AA] 517 517 Score 64 57 Sequence Coverage [%] 10 11 GI No. gi|6319603 gi|6319603 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_009685 NP_009685 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Vacuole membrane Subunit B of the eightsubunit V1 peripheral membrane domain of the vacuolar H+-ATPase (VATPase), an electrogenic proton pump found throughout the endomembrane system; contains nucleotide binding sites. Rib3p, gi|6320695 (52) Vacuole membrane Subunit B of the eightsubunit V1 peripheral membrane domain of the vacuolar H+-ATPase (VATPase), an electrogenic proton pump found throughout the endomembrane system; contains nucleotide binding sites. Unnamed protein product, gi|395245 (20) Spot No 124I 135 Gene name VMA4 VMA6 Mass [kDa] 26.45 40.1 pI [pH] 5.33 4.48 Sequence length [AA] 233 345 Score 253 81 Sequence Coverage [%] 48 12 GI No. gi|6324907 gi|6323480 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_014977 NP_013552 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Vacuole membrane Subunit E of the eightsubunit V1 peripheral membrane domain of the vacuolar H+-ATPase (VATPase), an electrogenic proton pump found throughout the endomembrane system; required for the V1 domain to assemble onto the vacuolar membrane YOR332Wplike protein (133) Vacuole membrane Subunit d of the fivesubunit V0 integral membrane domain of vacuolar H+-ATPase (VATPase), an electrogenic proton pump found in the endomembrane system; stabilizes VO subunits; required for V1 domain assembly on the vacuolar membrane. Erp6p, gi|6321436 (24) 77 78 Spot No 101D A Gene name VMA7 Mass [kDa] 13.45 pI [pH] 4.98 Sequence length [AA] 118 Score 96 Sequence Coverage [%] 30 GI No. gi|6321457 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_011534 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Vacuole membrane Subunit F of the eightsubunit V1 peripheral membrane domain of vacuolar H+-ATPase (VATPase), an electrogenic proton pump found throughout the endomembrane system; required for the V1 domain to assemble onto the vacuolar membrane. Tex1p, gi|6324076 (32) 12 kDa heat shock protein, gi|18479209 (30) Acp1p, gi|6322656 (27) 186IB WTM1 48.46 5.18 437 129 10 gi|6324804 NP_014873 Cytoplasm Nucleus Transcriptional modulator involved in regulation of meiosis, silencing, and expression of RNR genes; required for nuclear localization of the ribonucleotide reductase small subunit Rnr2p and Rnr4p; contains WD repeats. 20B YDR341 C 69.64 6.29 607 84 15 gi|190404719 EDV07986 (NP_010628) Cytoplasm Arginyl-tRNA synthetase. Spot No 193B 99I Gene name YHR020 W ZEO1 Mass [kDa] 77.85 12.58 pI [pH] 6.02 5.43 Sequence length [AA] 688 113 Score 131 443 Sequence Coverage [%] 13 60 GI No. gi|6321808 gi|6324463 Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) NP_011884 NP_014532 Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI No. (score) Cytoplasm Hypothetical protein that may interact with ribosomes, based on copurification experiments; has similarity to prolinetRNA ligase; YHR020W is an essential gene Mas2p, gi|6321813 (27) Plasma membrane Interacts with Mid2p; regulates the cell integrity pathway mediated by Pkc1p and Slt2p; the authentic protein is detected in a phosphorylated state in highly purified mitochondria. Cct8p, gi|6322452 (24) 79 3.3.2. 2DanalysisofpI6‐11proteins The image of proteins separated by 2DE using pH 6-11 IEF is shown in Figure 14. The Coomassie stained gel showed 152 visible proteins. The total number of proteins identified by PMF was 70 at the 5% level of significance. Table 6 shows pH 6-11 proteins identified by MALDI MS/MS. Thirty-three identifications corresponded to unique protein matches. The other 37 proteins represented multiple spots of proteins or protein isoforms. Proteins with multiple spots included Cdc19, Gpm1, Rps5, Tdh3 and Tef2. Identified isoforms included Atp1, Atp3, Cdc12, Cdc19, Imd2, Imd4, Rpl11A, Rpl12B, Rpl13B, Rpl13A, Rps15, Rps19B, Rps20, Rps22A, Rps27A, Rps3, Rps4B, Rps5, Rps7A, Shm1, Shm2, Tdh1, Tdh3, Tef2 and Tef4. The next protein match found 30.2% of the proteins that were next in line for a match were significant at the 5% level (score value ≥ 56). Six glycolytic proteins (Cdc19, Eno2, Gpm1, Pgk1, Tdh1 and Tdh3) were found. The abbreviation for pyruvate kinase is Cdc19. 80 Figure 14 - The 2DE image representing the protein (100 µg) profile of BY4741 separated on a pH 6-11 gradient. Proteins were stained with Coomassie. Protein identification was done by MALDI mass spectrometry and significantly identified proteins are marked with an arrow (Table 6). The ladder used for molecular weight reference was Rainbow 851. 81 82 Table 6 - A summary of identified BY4741 proteins separated on a 6-11 pH gradient. Proteins were separated by 2DE and identified by MALDI mass spectrometry. Proteins (score ≥ 56, p ≤ 0.05) were alphabetized by gene name. The score and sequence coverage (%) values are representative of the significance of the match generated by the MASCOT search. The calculated mass, pI, GI, accession number and description of the protein are gathered from the NCBI protein website. The subcellular localization of the protein was found using Uniprot. The next matched protein was the next non-homologous protein matched. The spot position was cross checked with the calculated pI and Mr values. Alterations in protein positioning resulted in the labeling of A: acidic shift or B: basic shift in pI; I: increase or D: decrease in Mr. Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 109DA AAT2 47.99 8.89 432 140 17 gi|1360338 CAA97550 Cytoplasm Peroxisome Aspartate aminotransferase family. This family belongs to pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent aspartate aminotransferase superfamily (fold I). Pyridoxal phosphate combines with an alphaamino acid to form a compound called a Schiff base or aldimine. Q0130, gi|213322 4 (26) 138I ARC1 42.44 7.7 375 410 23 gi|1002712 AAC49072 (NP_011410) Cytoplasm G4p1 (GU4 nucleic binding-protein 1). High-copy hsp90 suppress or, gi|151944 268 (38) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 122 ATP1 54.96 6.73 510 499 33 gi|11938990 4 2HLD_A (NP_009453) Mitochondrion inner membrane Chain A, Mitochondrial F1-Atpase. Imd3p, gi|632346 4 (495) 81A ATP3 30.65 9.06 278 88 23 gi|11938991 0 2HLD_G (NP_009595) Mitochondrion inner membrane Chain G, Mitochondrial F1-Atpase. YBR039 Wp-like protein, gi|207347 765 (49) 108DA BAT1 43.79 9.01 393 77 23 gi|6322002 NP_012078 Mitochondrion matrix Mitochondrial branchedchain amino acid aminotransferase, homolog of murine ECA39; highly expressed during logarithmic phase and repressed during stationary phase. (-) 111IA CAM1 24.69 9.14 219 102 23 gi|28374020 1NHY_A (NP_015277) Cytoplasm Nucleus Chain A, GST-like domain of elongation factor 1gamma. Spc42p, gi|632280 9 (29) 83 84 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 137I CDC12 46.75 7.77 407 121 27 gi|6321899 NP_011975 Membrane Peripheral membrane bud neck Component of the septin ring of the mother-bud neck that is required for cytokinesis; septins recruit proteins to the neck and can act as a barrier to diffusion at the membrane, and they comprise the 10nm filaments seen with EM. Silent mating loci repressor, gi|151941 641 (32) 140A CDC19 54.9 7.56 500 442 34 gi|6319279 NP_009362 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, converts phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate in glycolysis, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. Threonine deaminas e, gi|190405 649 (39) 119IA CDC19 54.9 7.56 500 362 31 gi|6319279 NP_009362 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. YBR069C p-like protein, gi|207347 739 (34) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 120A CDC19 54.9 7.56 500 310 24 gi|6319279 NP_009362 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. ATPase 1 alpha subunit, gi|171116 (34) 130DA CDC19 54.96 8 499 259 21 gi|4180 CAA24631 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. Branched -chain amino acid transamin ase, gi|151945 213 (176) 72D CDC19 54.96 8 499 156 14 gi|4180 CAA24631 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. Rps5p, gi|632258 3 (68) 85 86 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 46DA CDC19 54.96 8 499 62 13 gi|4180 CAA24631 Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. Lsp1p, gi|632525 3 (20) 114 DBP2 61.23 8.8 546 90 17 gi|16038061 1 A6ZRX0 (NP_014287.3) Cytoplasm Nucleus ATP-dependent RNA helicase involved nonsense-mediated mRNA decay and ribosome biogenesis through rRNA processing. Cbr1p, gi|865589 08 (26) 97A DED1 65.73 8.18 604 129 25 gi|227524 1705300A (NP_014847) Cytoplasm ATP dependent RNA helicase. Chain A, Scpex13p Sh3 domain, gi|289489 68 (25) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 143DA EHT1 51.5 7.64 451 174 23 gi|6319655 NP_009736 Lipid Particle Mitochondrion outer membrane Acyl-coenzymeA: ethanol O-acyltransferase that plays a minor role in medium-chain fatty acid ethyl ester biosynthesis; possesses short-chain esterase activity; localizes to lipid particles and the mitochondrial outer membrane. Shm2p, gi|632308 7 (132) 8DB ENO2 46.94 5.67 437 295 33 gi|6321968 NP_012044 Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. Chain A, Mata1MA TALPHA2 -3a heterodim er bound to DNA complex, gi|214660 66 (26) 87 88 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 146A ERG10 42.04 7.01 398 111 10 gi|6325229 NP_015297 Cytoplasm Acetyl-CoA Cacetyltransferase (acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase), Cytoplasmic enzyme that transfers an acetyl group from one acetyl-CoA molecule to another, forming acetoacetyl-CoA; involved in the first step in mevalonate biosynthesis. Chain C, Ribosoma l 80sEef2Sordarin complex, gi|492588 41 (49) 76IA GPM1 26.68 8.27 237 269 48 gi|15788446 6 5PGM_E (NP_012770) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Chain E, Phosphoglycerate mutase. Fab1p, gi|143185 41 (29) 70I GPM1 26.68 8.27 237 247 47 gi|15788446 6 5PGM_E (NP_012770) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Chain E, Phosphoglycerate mutase. Pau9p, gi|131291 51 (36) 65DB GPM1 26.68 8.27 237 122 35 gi|15788446 6 5PGM_E (NP_012770) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Chain E, Phosphoglycerate mutase. Chain B, Sec23Sar1 complexe d with the active fragment of Sec31, gi|165761 045 (30) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 71I GPM1 26.68 8.27 237 64 32 gi|15788446 6 5PGM_E (NP_012770) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Chain E, Phosphoglycerate mutase. (-) 94 GUS1 81.19 7.21 708 103 18 gi|37362649 NP_011269 Cytoplasm Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS), forms a complex with methionyl-tRNA synthetase (Mes1p) and Arc1p; complex formation increases the catalytic efficiency of both tRNA synthetases and ensures their correct localization to the cytoplasm. Ptc1p, gi|642800 (33) 1DA HSP10 11.36 8.96 106 143 58 gi|6324594 NP_014663 Mitochondrion matrix Mitochondrial matrix cochaperonin that inhibits the ATPase activity of Hsp60p, a mitochondrial chaperonin; involved in protein folding and sorting in the mitochondria; 10 kD heat shock protein with similarity to E. coli groES. Rps10ap, gi|632486 7 (69) 89 90 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 24I HTB2 14.09 10.07 130 71 36 gi|15988135 1ID3_D (NP_009553) Chromosome Nucleus Chain D, Nucleosome core particle reveals fundamental differences in inter-nucleosome interactions. Gly1p, gi|585212 (42) 134DA IDH1 38.54 8.07 354 143 26 gi|16701343 0 3BLV_A (NP_014361) Mitochondrion Chain A, Isocitrate dehydrogenase with citrate bound in the regulatory subunits. Conserve d protein, gi|151944 262 (26) 112A IDP1 48.21 8.42 427 90 23 gi|19350651 1 2QFV_A (NP_010217) Mitochondrion Chain A, Mitochondrial NADP(+)-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase in complex with NADP(+). (-) 118A ILV3 63.39 7.92 585 192 19 gi|6322476 NP_012550 Mitochondrion Dihydroxyacid dehydratase,catalyzes third step in the common pathway leading to biosynthesis of branchedchain amino acids. YAL039C p-like protein, gi|207348 032 (29) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 115DA IMD2 56.95 8.71 523 434 26 gi|6322012 NP_012088 Cytoplasm Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase catalyzes the rate-limiting step in GTP biosynthesis, expression is induced by mycophenolic acid resulting in resistance to the drug, and expression is repressed by nutrient limitation. (-) 117A IMD4 56.87 8.39 524 313 25 gi|6323585 NP_013656 Cytoplasm Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase catalyzes the first step of GMP biosynthesis, member of a four-gene family in S. cerevisiae, constitutively expressed. Ups3p, gi|632039 1 (39) 139 OLA1 44.48 7.05 394 234 40 gi|6319499 NP_009581 Cytoplasm P-loop ATPase with similarity to human OLA1 and bacterial YchF; identified as specifically interacting with the proteasome; protein levels are induced by hydrogen peroxide. Ptc7p, gi|124263 204 (28) 91 92 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 151DA PGK1 44.76 7.11 416 274 45 gi|10383781 NP_009938 Cytoplasm 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, catalyzes transfer of high-energy phosphoryl groups from the acyl phosphate of 1,3bisphosphoglycerate to ADP to produce ATP; key enzyme in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. Spindle pole compone nt, gi|151942 674 (33) 124I PGK1 44.59 7.1 415 163 28 gi|15783686 7 3PGK_A (NP_009938) Cytoplasm Chain A, Phosphoglycerate kinase. (-) 145DA PGK1 44.59 7.1 415 158 23 gi|15783686 7 3PGK_A (NP_009938) Cytoplasm Chain A, Phosphoglycerate kinase. SCY_403 1, gi|151940 675 (26) 64 PGK1 44.6 6.73 415 154 16 gi|15783361 0 1QPG_A (NP_009938) Cytoplasm Chain A, 3Phosphoglycerate kinase, mutation R65q. Rps7ap, gi|632467 0 (109) 147IA PGK1 44.6 6.73 415 115 18 gi|15783361 0 1QPG_A (NP_009938) Cytoplasm Chain A, 3Phosphoglycerate kinase, mutation R65q. Cit1p, gi|632432 8 (102) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 35 PHB2 34.44 9.92 310 56 18 gi|50593217 NP_011747 Mitochondrion inner membrane Subunit of the prohibitin complex (Phb1p-Phb2p), a 1.2 MDa ring-shaped inner mitochondrial membrane chaperone that stabilizes newly synthesized proteins; determinant of replicative life span; involved in mitochondrial segregation. None 25I RPL11 A 18.79 9.91 165 392 32 gi|11939053 0 2NOQ_H (NP_015427) Cytoplasm Protein of the large 60S ribosomal subunit, nearly identical to Rpl11Bp but expressed at twice the level; involved in ribosomal assembly; depletion causes degradation of 60S proteins and RNA; similar to E. coli L5 and rat L11. FUN20, gi|5241 (47) 93 94 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 28I RPL12 B 17.86 9.43 165 99 27 gi|6320625 NP_010706 Cytoplasm Protein component of the large (60S) ribosomal subunit, nearly identical to Rpl12Ap; rpl12a rpl12b double mutant exhibits slow growth and slow translation; has similarity to E. coli L11 and rat L12 ribosomal proteins. (-) 75IA RPL13 A 22.4 11.18 198 122 20 gi|19040508 8 EDV08355 (NP_010201) Cytoplasm Ribosomal protein L13A. Tdh3p, gi|632163 1 (62) 56IA RPL13 B 22.51 11.08 199 82 35 gi|6323791 NP_013862 Cytoplasm Protein component of the large (60S) ribosomal subunit, nearly identical to Rpl13Ap; not essential for viability; has similarity to rat L13 ribosomal protein Pau9p, gi|131291 51 (36) 18IA RPS15 8.88 9.9 80 70 16 gi|49258836 1S1H_S (NP_014602) Cytoplasm Chain S, Ribosomal 80sEef2-sordarin complex obtained by docking atomic models for RNA and protein components Into a 11.7 A cryo-em map. Rps15p, gi|632453 3 (68) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 16 RPS19 B 15.88 9.61 144 205 61 gi|6324027 NP_014097 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, required for assembly and maturation of pre-40 S particles; mutations in human RPS19 are associated with Diamond Blackfananemia; nearly identical to Rps19Ap. Eno2p, gi|632196 8 (123) 20IA RPS20 13.89 9.52 121 249 54 gi|6321772 NP_011848 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; overproduction suppresses mutations affecting RNA polymerase III-dependent transcription; has similarity to E. coli S10 and rat S20 ribosomal proteins. AWRI163 1_22090, gi|207347 659 (33) 21IA RPS22 A 14.53 9.94 129 153 29 gi|49258827 1S1H_H (NP_012345) Cytoplasm Chain H, Ribosomal 80sEef2-Sordarin Complex obtained by docking atomic models for RNA and protein components into a 11.7 A Cryo-Em Map. Faf1p, gi|632217 0 (33) 95 96 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 9DB RPS27 A 9.02 9.37 81 104 38 gi|2131116 CAA81997 Cytoplasm 40 S ribosomal protein S27-A. YLR146W -A, gi|827952 59 (26) 41IA RPS3 26.54 9.42 240 83 54 gi|6324151 NP_014221 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit has apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease activity; essential for viability; has similarity to E.coli S3 and rat S3 ribosomal proteins. Ics2p, gi|302677 48 (30) 39D RPS4B 29.44 10.09 261 144 33 gi|6321997 NP_012073 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; identical to Rps4Ap and has similarity to rat S4 ribosomal protein. Tex1p, gi|632407 6 (37) 53IA RPS5 25.08 8.63 225 217 35 gi|6322583 NP_012657 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, the least basic of the non-acidic ribosomal proteins; phosphorylated in vivo; essential for viability; has similarity to E. coli S7 and rat S5 ribosomal proteins. Rpl13bp, gi|632379 1 (28) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 51IA RPS5 25.08 8.63 225 56 23 gi|6322583 NP_012657 Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, the least basic of the non-acidic ribosomal proteins; phosphorylated in vivo; essential for viability; has similarity to E. coli S7 and rat S5 ribosomal proteins. None 63IA RPS7A 21.6 9.83 190 161 22 gi|6324670 NP_014739 Cytoplasm Nucleus > nucleolus Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit, nearly identical to Rps7Bp; interacts with Kti11p; deletion causes hypersensitivity to zymocin; has similarity to rat S7 and Xenopus S8 ribosomal proteins. Rpl16bp, gi|632426 0 (54) 97 98 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 86A RPT6 45.47 9.09 405 57 22 gi|6321390 NP_011467 Cytoplasm Nucleus One of six ATPases of the 19S regulatory particle of the 26S proteasome involved in the degradation of ubiquitinated substrates; bound by ubiquitin-protein ligases Ubr1p and Ufd4p; localized mainly to the nucleus throughout the cell cycle. SUG1 gene, gi|228885 (52) 136A SHM1 53.88 8.83 490 79 13 gi|37362622 NP_009822 Mitochondrion Mitochondrial serine hydroxymethyl transferase, converts serine to glycine plus 5,10methylenetetrahydrof olate; involved in generating precursors for purine, pyrimidine, amino acid, and lipid biosynthesis; reverse reaction generates serine. Chain A, Pi-Scei, gi|311441 0 (50) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 142D SHM2 52.47 6.98 469 248 34 gi|6323087 NP_013159 Cytoplasm Cytoplasmic serine hydroxymethyl transferase, converts serine to glycine plus 5,10methylenetetrahydrof olate; major isoform involved in generating precursors for purine, pyrimidine, amino acid, and lipid biosynthesis. YKL081W p-like protein, gi|207343 526 (83) 87 SIS1 37.56 9.02 352 272 37 gi|6324321 NP_014391 Cytoplasm Nucleus Type II HSP40 cochaperone that interacts with the HSP70 protein Ssa1p; not functionally redundant with Ydj1p due to due to substrate specificity; shares similarity with bacterial DNAJ proteins. Eis1p, gi|632367 4 (33) 99 100 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 80IA STM1 29.97 9.66 273 189 26 gi|6323179 NP_013251 Cytoplasm Nucleus Protein required for optimal translation under nutrient stress; perturbs association of Yef3p with ribosomes; involved in TOR signaling; binds G4 quadruplex and purine motif triplex nucleic acid; helps maintain telomere structure. Chain P, Nterminal domain of Tlg1 complexe d with Nterminus of Vps51, gi|881925 65 (30) 132DA TDH1 35.84 8.29 332 161 31 gi|6322409 NP_012483 Cytoplasm Glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase, isozyme 1, involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; tetramer that catalyzes the reaction of glyceraldehyde-3phosphate to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate. Tar1p, gi|232703 99 (30) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 128D TDH3 35.83 6.46 332 110 25 gi|6321631 NP_011708 Cytoplasm Glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase, isozyme 3, involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; tetramer that catalyzes the reaction of glyceraldehyde-3phosphate to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate. (-) 43DB TDH3 35.83 6.46 332 89 12 gi|6321631 NP_011708 Cytoplasm Glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase, isozyme 3, involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; tetramer that catalyzes the reaction of glyceraldehyde-3phosphate to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate. Erp6p, gi|632143 6 (31) 101 102 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 152D TDH3 35.83 6.46 332 56 18 gi|6321631 NP_011708 Cytoplasm Glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase, isozyme 3, involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; tetramer that catalyzes the reaction of glyceraldehyde-3phosphate to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate. (-) 153D TEF2 50.4 9.14 458 328 40 gi|6319594 NP_009676 Cytoplasm Translational elongation factor EF-1 alpha; also encoded by TEF1; functions in the binding reaction of aminoacyltRNA (AA-tRNA) to ribosomes; may also have a role in tRNA re-export from the nucleus. Chain B, Sec23Sar1 complexe d with the active fragment of Sec31, gi|165761 045 (32) 83D TEF2 50.4 9.14 458 88 9 gi|6319594 NP_009676 Cytoplasm Translational elongation factor EF-1 alpha; also encoded by TEF1; functions in the binding reaction of aminoacyltRNA (AA-tRNA) to ribosomes; may also have a role in tRNA re-export from the nucleus. YAR042 Wp, gi|302677 74 (29) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 82D TEF2 50.4 9.14 458 59 8 gi|6319594 NP_009676 Cytoplasm Translational elongation factor EF-1 alpha; also encoded by TEF1; functions in the binding reaction of aminoacyltRNA (AA-tRNA) to ribosomes; may also have a role in tRNA re-export from the nucleus. (-) 68DB TEF2 41.54 8.36 376 114 15 gi|32693297 AAM83114 (NP_009676) Cytoplasm Translation elongation factor 1-alpha. Chain B, Sec23Sar1 complexe d with the active fragment of Sec31, gi|165761 045 (34) 85IB TEF2 31.6 7.22 289 103 13 gi|15989524 2 ABX09905 (NP_009676) Cytoplasm Translation elongation factor 1-alpha. (-) 106D TEF2 40.56 8.13 367 66 23 gi|32693293 AAM83112 (NP_009676) Cytoplasm Translation elongation factor 1-alpha. (-) 103 104 Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 123DA TEF4 46.5 7.63 411 182 23 gi|538258 AAA21473 (NP_012842) Cytoplasm Elongation factor 1gamma Chain A, 3Phosphog lycerate kinase, mutation R65q, gi|157833 610 (85) 100 TKL1 73.8 6.48 680 194 11 gi|3212468 1AY0_A (NP_015399) Cytoplasm Chain A, Transketolase. Conserve d protein, gi|151944 795 (28) 141I UGP1 56.18 6.98 499 291 29 gi|6322815 NP_012889 Cytoplasm UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGPase), catalyses the reversible formation of UDP-Glc from glucose 1phosphate and UTP, involved in a wide variety of metabolic pathways, expression modulated by Pho85p through Pho4p. Q0130, gi|213322 4 (35) Spot No Gene name Mass [kDa] pI [pH] Sequence length [AA] Score Sequence Coverage [%] GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/ Swiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] (BLAST Accession No) Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 61DA YNK1 17.21 8.65 153 250 44 gi|6322783 NP_012856 Cytoplasm Mitochondrion intermembrane space Nucleoside diphosphate kinase catalyzes the transfer of gamma phosphates from nucleoside triphosphates, usually ATP, to nucleoside diphosphates by a mechanism that involves formation of an autophosphorylated enzyme intermediate. Rps17bp, gi|632065 5 (81) 105 3.4. Geneontology Analysis of the function of identified proteins was done using the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG). Proteins were searched against the S. cerevisiae reference database, and the results are shown in Figure 15 (refer to supplementary file 1 for additional information). The majority of proteins that were identified were classified as being involved in metabolism. Thirty-eight proteins were classified as participating in secondary metabolism (Aat2, Ade13, Adh1, Adk1, Ald6, Aro8, Bat1, Cdc19, Eno1, Eno2, Erg10, Fba1, Glk1, Gnd1, Gpm1, Gus1, Hom2, Hxk2, Idh1, Idp1, Ilv3, Imd2, Imd4, Pdc1, Pfk2, Pgk1, Pmi40, Psa1, Sam1, Sec53, Shm1, Shm2, Tdh1, Tdh3, Tkl1, Tpi1, Ugp1 and Ynk1). “Carbohydrate metabolism” contained 27 proteins (Adh1, Ald6, Cdc19, Eno1, Eno2, Erg10, Fba1, Glk1, Gln1, Gnd1, Gpm1, Hxk2, Idh1, Idp1, Lys21, Pdc1, Pfk2, Pgk1, Pmi40, Psa1, Sec53, Shm1, Shm2, Tdh1, Tdh3, Tkl1, Tpi1 and Ugp1), and included the subgroup “glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis” with 15 proteins (Adh1, Ald6, Cdc19, Eno1, Eno2, Fba1, Glk1, Gpm1, Hxk2, Pdc1, Pfk2, Pgk1, Tdh1, Tdh3 and Tpi1). Proteins involved in the central pathways of carbohydrate metabolism are shown in Table 7. Figure 16 shows the location of glycolytic enzymes on a 2DE gel. Some locations did not match the predicted Mr or pI, most likely due to the presence of proteolytic fragments of posttranslational modifications. “Energy metabolism” included 16 proteins (Atp1, Atp2, Atp3, Eno1, Eno2, Fba1, Gdh1, Gln1, Gpm1, Pfk2, Shm1, Shm2, Vma2, Vma4, Vma6 and Vma7). Nucleotide metabolism was represented by 8 proteins (Ade13, Adk1, Cdc19, Fur1, Gua1, Imd2, Imd4 and Ynk1). There were 21 proteins involved in amino acid metabolism (Aat2, Ade13, Adh1, Ald6, Aro8, Bat1, Cys3, Erg10, Gdh1, Gln1, Gnd1, Gpm1, Hom2, Idp1, Ilv3, Lys21, Sah1, Sam1, Shm1, Shm2 and Spe3). “Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins” included 6 proteins: Aro8, Bat1, Gus1, Ilv3, Shm1 and Shm2. Erg10 was the only protein involved in metabolism of terpenoids and polyketides. Twenty-seven proteins were found to be involved in transcription/translation. Four proteins were involved in transcription (Dbp2, Ssa1, Ssa2 and Ssb2), twenty-three proteins were involved in translation (Dps1, Gus1, Rna1, Rpl11A, Rpl12B, Rpl13A, Rps0A, Rps12, Rps15, Rps19B, Rps20, Rps21A, Rps22A, Rps27A, Rps3, Rps4B, Rps5, 106 Rps7A, Sup45, Tef2, Tif2, Tif6 and YHR020W). Sixteen proteins were involved in folding, sorting and degradation (Cdc48, Eno1, Eno2, Hsc82, Hsp60, Hsp82, Kar2, Pdi1, Ssa1, Ssa2, Ssb2, Ssc1, Sse1, Rpt5 and Rpt6). Twelve proteins were involved in transport and catabolism (Act1, Idp1, Sod1, Ssa1, Ssa2, Ssb2, Tub1, Tub2, Vma2, Vma4, Vma6 and Vma7). Thirty-four proteins were uncategorized: Abp1, Ade5, 7, Arc1, Bmh1, Bmh2, Cam1, Cct5, Cdc12, Cof1, Cpr1, Eft2, Eht1, Fpr1, Hri1, Hsp10, Hsp104, Htb2, Ola1, Oye2, Paa1, Phb2, Prb1, Pst2, Sis1, Srp1, Ssb1, Stm1, Tef4, Tfp1, Tma19, Tpm1, Tsa1, Wtm1 and Zeo1. 107 Unknown Peroxisome Phagosome Endocytosis RNA degradation Proteasome Protein processing in endoplasmic reticulum Protein export Ribosome biogenesis in eukaryotes mRNA surveillance pathway RNA transport Aminoacyl‐tRNA biosynthesis Ribosome Spliceosome Terpenoid backbone biosynthesis Ubiquinone and other terpenoid‐quinone biosynthesis Porphyrin and chlorophyll metabolism One carbon pool by folate Pantothenate and CoA biosynthesis Glutathione metabolism Cyanoamino acid metabolism Selenocompound metabolism beta‐Alanine metabolism Phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis Tryptophan metabolism Phenylalanine metabolism Tyrosine metabolism Histidine metabolism Arginine and proline metabolism Lysine degradation Lysine biosynthesis Valine, leucine and isoleucine biosynthesis Valine, leucine and isoleucine degradation Cysteine and methionine metabolism Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism Alanine, aspartate and glutamate metabolism Pyrimidine metabolism Purine metabolism Glycerolipid metabolism Synthesis and degradation of ketone bodies Fatty acid metabolism Nitrogen metabolism Methane metabolism Oxidative phosphorylation Inositol phosphate metabolism Butanoate metabolism Propanoate metabolism Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism Pyruvate metabolism Amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism Starch and sucrose metabolism Galactose metabolism Fructose and mannose metabolism Pentose and glucuronate interconversions Pentose phosphate pathway Citrate cycle (TCA cycle) Glycolysis / Gluconeogenesis Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites Metabolic pathways 35 2 7 3 4 2 10 1 1 1 3 4 15 4 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 1 2 2 3 2 3 1 5 2 3 2 3 7 5 4 2 7 1 1 3 2 7 7 1 1 2 4 4 6 3 4 8 2 4 2 15 38 53 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Figure 15 - Gene ontology annotations of the functions of protein identified from the reference protein maps (Figure 13 and Figure 14). The number of proteins listed is greater than the number identified due to multifunctional properties of some proteins. 108 Table 7 - Identified proteins from the reference protein map (Table 5 and Table 6) that were involved in central carbohydrate metabolism (Figure 15). Gene name Protein name Gel A (pH 4-7, Figure 13) or gel B (pH 6-11, Figure 14) [Spot number] Glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis ADH1 Alcohol dehydrogenase 1 A[9, 10 & 31] ALD6 Aldehyde dehydrogenase 6 A[201] CDC19 Pyruvate kinase 19 B[46, 72, 119, 120, 130 & 140] ENO1 Enolase 1 A[15 & 17] ENO2 Enolase 2 A[35, 41, 42, 51, 162 & 224] B[8] FBA1 Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase 1 A[120] GLK1 Glucokinase 1 A[221] GPM1 Phosphoglycerate mutase 1 A[65, 70, 71 & 76] HXK2 Hexose kinase 2 A[82 & 187] PDC1 Pyruvate decarboxylase 1 A[27, 215 – 219] PFK2 Phosphofructokinase (β chain) A[200] PGK1 3-phosphoglycerate kinase A[13] B[64, 124, 145, 147 &151] TDH1 Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 1 B[132] TDH3 Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 3 A[5] B[43, 128 &152] TPI1 Trisephosphate isomerase A[45] Citrate acid cycle (TCA cycle) IDH1 Mitochondrial NAD+dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 B[134] IDP1 Mitochondrial NADP specific isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 B[112] Pentose phosphate pathway FBA1 Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase 1 A[120] GND1 6-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase 1 A[16] PFK2 Phosphofructokinase (β chain) A[200] TKL1 Transketolase 1 B[100] 109 Figure 16 - Two-dimensional gel images of BY4741 proteins (100 µg) separated on pH 4-7 (Figure 13, top) or pH 6-11 (Figure 14, bottom) IPG strips. The positions of glycolytic enzymes are shown. The ladder used for molecular weight reference was Rainbow 851. 110 3.5. Measurementofglucoseuseandethanolproduction The aim of this set of experiments was to determine conditions for growth of S. cerevisiae for 2D-DIGE comparative analysis of fermentative and non-fermentative growth. Two approaches were explored: using different glucose concentrations and use of glycerol as a carbon source. Table 8 summarizes glucose consumption and ethanol production for cell cultures grown on 0.2–2% glucose (A), and growth on glucose or glycerol (B). Results include means and standard deviations for each n = 4 experiment. The first experiment, examined the use of low (0.2%), medium (0.5%) or high (2%) concentrations of glucose in SC media (Table 8A), and shows complete use of glucose at low and medium concentrations. Ethanol was only detected for cells grown at the high (2%) glucose concentration indicating use of glucose in the alternative pathways at the lower (0.2%, 0.5%) glucose concentrations. For the “high glucose” grown cells, glucose consumption was partial and the ratio of ethanol produced to glucose used was greater than expected for complete conversion of glucose to ethanol (2 ethanol per glucose). This suggested that other pathways may have contributed to ethanol production unless measurement errors were responsible for the > 2 ratio. In the second experiment, comparing growth on glycerol, ethanol was only produced when glucose was the substrate (Table 8B). Therefore, fermentative growth was indicated by high ethanol production in aerobic conditions, and consumption of glucose. Table 8 - Glucose consumption and ethanol production of 0.2% (low), 0.5% (medium) and 2% (high) glucose grown yeast cells (A) and 3% glycerol vs. 2% glucose grown cells (B). The second and third column displays the respective amount of glucose remaining and used. The last column represents the amount of ethanol produced in mmols as well as the ratio of glucose to ethanol used. A Glucose %(mmol) Glucose remaining (mmol) Glucose used (mmol) Ethanol produced (mmol) [ethanol/glucose] 0.2% (0.27) 0 0.27 0 0.5% (0.67) 0 0.67 0 2% (2.7) 1.09 ±0.06 1.61 6.9 ±0.44 [2.56] 111 B 3.6. Glucose or glycerol %(mmol) Glucose remaining (mmol) Glucose used (mmol) Ethanol produced (ethanol/glucose) 3% glycerol (G1) 0 0 0 2% glucose (2.7) 1.29 ±0.11 1.41 6.19 ±1.19 [2.29] 3% glycerol (G2) 0 0 0 Comparativeproteomics 2D-DIGE was used to compare differences in protein abundances between fermentative and non-fermentative growth using cells grown on glucose or glycerol. 3.6.1. Growthonglucose(D)orglycerol(G) A 2D-DIGE experiment was used to compare the differences between glycerol (G2) and glucose (D) grown cells using pH 3-11 non-linear (3-11NL) IPG strips. The 2DDIGE image showing the differences between glucose (red) and glycerol (blue) supplemented cells is shown in Figure 17. A total of 219 proteins changed greater than 2-fold at p ≤ 0.01 (refer to supplementary file 2). Of these, 99 protein spots had an average ratio greater than 2, indicative of greater protein abundance in glucose grown conditions. The majority of proteins specific to fermentative growth had a neutral or acidic pI. The other 120 had an average ratio less than -2, indicating greater protein abundance in glycerol grown conditions. A large group of basic protein spots were associated with cells grown on glycerol. Only a small number of these proteins were identified by excision of CBB G-250 stained spots off the 2DDIGE gels because of the small protein amounts used in DIGE analysis (indicated by a black arrow) (Table 8). The abundant proteins specific to glucose growth that were identified included Fba1, Eno2, Sec53, Ssa1/2, Sod1, Egd2, Crp1 and Fpr1 shown in Figure 17 and Table 9. Of note, several glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis proteins were found to be more abundant in glucose grown cultures (Fba1 and Eno2). 112 Figu ure 17 - Two-d dimensional im mages of the DIG GE experimentt portraying th he differences in n protein abundance between n BY4741 cells grow wn in glucose ((red) and glyceerol (blue). Thee DIGE experim ment required fluorescent lab beling of the cell cultures in 2% glucose or 3% glyccerol with diffeerent dyes. Thee colored asteriisks represent proteins that had h a significan nt level of change (≥ 2X, p ≤ 0..01). Proteins iden ntified from thee 2D-DIGE gels with a signifiicant MASCOT T score are marrked with black k asterisks. 113 Table 9 lists proteins that were identified by excision of protein spots from 2D-DIGE gels. For each identified protein the DeCyderTM spot number is given, with the average ratio (fold change) between replicates, the Student’s t-test value and the gene name. Proteins that were identified were specific to growth on glucose. No proteins specific to non-fermentative growth (3% glycerol) were identified. Table 9 - Proteins identified from the glucose versus glycerol grown DIGE experiment (p ≤ 0.01). The data is sorted by the average ratio from lowest to highest fold (≥ 2-fold) change. The average ratio is the value of change from condition 1 (glucose) in comparison to condition 2 (glycerol). A positive average ratio indicates an increase in protein abundance associated with growth on glucose. Master No (Spot No) Average ratio t-test Protein name Gene name 1891 (16) 2.04 0.008 Phosphomannomutase SEC53 1576 (37) 3 0.0037 Fructose-1,6bisphosphate aldolase FBA1 1069 (137/138) 3.3 0.0046 Stress-seventy subfamily A SSA1/2 2051 (7) 4.1 0.0012 Superoxide dismutase SOD1 1916 (17) 4.28 0.0046 Enhancer of Gal4 DNA binding EGD2 2194 (33) 6.04 0.0045 Cyclosporin Asensitive proline rotamase CPR1 1455 (97) 6.55 0.00021 Enolase ENO2 2155 (150) 7.2 4.10E-05 Fk 506-senstive proline rotamase FPR1 Subsequently, attempts were made to identify proteins that changed in abundance by matching proteins in the glucose vs. glycerol DIGE experiment (Figure 17) to the reference gels (Figure 13, Figure 14) using ‘landmark patterns’ on all gels. These proteins are listed in Table 10, and are possible matches only. Eighteen proteins were matched. 114 Glycerol Table 10 - Possible protein identifications for the glucose vs. glycerol DIGE experiment. The reference pH 4-7 (Figure 13) and 6-11 (Figure 14) gels were used to match spots DeCyderTM assigned to the glucose versus glycerol 2D-DIGE gel (Figure 17). Master spot No. Possible spot match Protein name Gene name 846 177 Actin binding protein 1 ABP1 1762 128 Brain modulosignalin homologue 1 BMH1 1713 127 Brain modulosignalin homologue 2 BMH2 1408 77 Glutamate dehydrogenase GDH1 1267 24 Guanine auxotroph 1 GUA1 1216 217 Pyruvate dehydrogenase PDC1 683 200 Phosphofrucotokinase PFK2 1538 30 GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase PSA1 1843 139 40S ribosomal protein S0-A RPS0A 2042 104 40S ribosomal protein S12 RPS12 1231 93 Importin subunit alpha SRP1 1047 189 Heat shock protein homolog SSC1 SSC1 863 191 Heat shock protein homolog SSE1 SSE1 1484 147 Translation initiation factor 2 TIF2 1923 131 Translation initiation factor 6 TIF6 1900 45 Triosephosphate isomerase TPI1 1027 20 Arginyl-tRNA synthase YDR341C 2101 99 Zeocin resistance protein ZEO1 115 Figure 18 shows the GO annotations between the reference protein map and the proteins identified in the glucose versus glycerol DIGE experiment (refer to supplementary file 3 for additional information). The GO analysis of the glucose vs. glycerol 2D-DIGE experiment reflect a similar pattern, at a smaller scale, of functional groups compared to the GO annotations of the reference protein map. Carbohydrate metabolism is the largest category in both experiments. Figure 19 shows proteins involved in ethanol synthesis that were identified from the reference gels (red box) (Figure 13, Figure 14, Table 5 and Table 6) or changed in protein abundance between cells grown on glucose (D+) or glycerol (G+). Only four of the 11 proteins involved in ethanol synthesis were identified in the 2D-DIGE experiment between cells grown in glucose or glycerol. 116 12 Transport and catabolism 3 24 Translation 1 4 Transcription 2 9 Nucleotide metabolism 1 1 0 Metabolism of terpenoids and polyketides 8 Metabolism of other amino acids 0 6 Metabolism of cofactors and vitamins 0 5 Lipid metabolism 1 17 Folding, sorting and degradation 5 16 Energy metabolism 1 56 Carbohydrate metabolism 8 38 Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites 8 42 Amino acid metabolism 1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Figure 18 - Comparative gene ontology annotations of the functions between proteins identified for the reference protein map (red) and proteins identified from the glucose vs. glycerol DIGE experiment (blue). The number of proteins listed is greater than the number identified due to multifunctional properties of some proteins. 117 Figure 19 - Identified proteins (red box) involved in glucose and glycerol metabolism. The diagram also shows identified proteins that changed in glycerol (G+) or glucose (D+) conditions. 118 Proteins that were w match hed by com mparison with w the refference gells (Figure 13, 1 Figure 14). P Proteins th hat were teentatively iidentified, not all of which w werre subject to o specific grow wth conditiions are sh hown in Fig gure 20 an nd Table 11. Twenty--seven prottein spots weree identified d that correesponded to 20 uniqu ue protein identificattions. Six glycolytic proteins were identified (Cdc19, En no1, Eno2, Fba1, Pgk1 and Tpi11) as well as a the ferm mentative enzyme Ad dh4. Adh22 and its tra anscription nal regulatoor Adr1 were w deteected, howeever they had h Masco ot scores ≤ 56 5 with low w confiden nce interva als. Figu ure 20 - Co oomassie sttained 2D--DIGE gel of o the glucose vs. glyycerol expeeriment. Proteins (30 µg g), which were w identiified by MA ALDI MS, are shown n in Table 11. 1 Fourr proteins (24, ( 39, 40, 45) had M MASCOT sccores less than t 56 witth low con nfidence interrval. 119 9 120 Table 11 - Proteins identified from the simplified glucose vs. glycerol grown DIGE experiment. Proteins (30 µg) were separated on pH 311 NL IPG strips and identified using MALDI TOF/TOF. Proteins (score ≥ 56, p ≤ 0.05) are sorted alphabetically by their gene name. The score and sequence coverage (%) values are representative of the significance of the match generated by the MASCOT search. The calculated mass, pI, GI, accession number and description of the protein are gathered from the NCBI protein website. The subcellular localization of the protein was from UniProt. The next matched protein was the next non-homologous protein match. Spot No 24* Gene name ADH2 Mass [kDa] 37.17 pI [pH] 6.26 Sequence length [AA] 348 Score 20 Sequence Coverage [%] 20 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Glucose-repressible alcohol dehydrogenase II, catalyzes the conversion of ethanol to acetaldehyde; involved in the production of certain regulated by ADR1. None None (-) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6323961 NP_014032 40* ADH2 37.17 6.26 348 36 36 gi|6323961 NP_014032 Cytoplasm Glucose-repressible alcohol dehydrogenase II, catalyzes the conversion of ethanol to acetaldehyde; involved in the production of certain regulated by ADR1. 36 ADH4 41.46 5.76 382 88 32 gi|205831682 P10127 (NP_011258) Mitochondrion Alcohol dehydrogenase 4 Spot No 34 39* 45* Gene name ADH4 ADR1 ADR1 Mass [kDa] 41.46 15.72 15.72 pI [pH] 5.76 6.27 6.27 Sequence length [AA] Score 382 56 139 139 20 22 Sequence Coverage [%] GI No 30 gi|205831682 20 22 Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Mitochondrion Alcohol dehydrogenase 4 (-) Nucleus Carbon sourceresponsive zinc-finger transcription factor, required for transcription of the glucoserepressed gene ADH2, of peroxisomal protein genes, and of genes required for ethanol, glycerol, and fatty acid utilization. None Nucleus Carbon sourceresponsive zinc-finger transcription factor, required for transcription of the glucoserepressed gene ADH2, of peroxisomal protein genes, and of genes required for ethanol, glycerol, and fatty acid utilization None (BLAST Accession No) gi|197253860 gi|197253860 P10127 (NP_011258) ACH54265 (NP_010502) ACH54265 (NP_010502) 121 122 Spot No 118 77 33 Gene name CDC1 9 CPR1 CPR1 Mass [kDa] 54.91 17.49 17.49 pI [pH] 7.56 6.90 6.90 Sequence length [AA] 500 162 162 Score 73 103 66 Sequence Coverage [%] 24 50 54 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Pyruvate kinase, functions as a homotetramer in glycolysis to convert phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate, the input for aerobic (TCA cycle) or anaerobic (glucose fermentation) respiration. Fat1p partial, AAP21758 (19) Cytoplasm Cytoplasmic peptidylprolylcis-trans isomerase (cyclophilin), catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of peptide bonds N-terminal to proline residues; binds the drug cyclosporin A. unnamed protein product, CAA25036 (30) Cytoplasm Cytoplasmic peptidylprolylcis-trans isomerase (cyclophilin), catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of peptide bonds N-terminal to proline residues; binds the drug cyclosporin A. Tom5p, NP_015459 (23) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6319279 gi|6320359 gi|6320359 NP_009362 NP_010439 NP_010439 Spot No 78 Gene name CPR3 Mass [kDa] 20.02 pI [pH] 8.81 Sequence length [AA] 182 Score 71 Sequence Coverage [%] 44 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Mitochondrion matrix Mitochondrial peptidylprolylcis-trans isomerase (cyclophilin),catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of peptide bonds N-terminal to proline residues; involved in protein refolding after import into mitochondria. unnamed protein product partial, CAA97190 (30) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6323562 NP_013633 17 EGD2 18.30 4.84 170 95 57 gi|172043 AAC15849 (NP_012063) Cytoplasm Nucleus Egd2p (Enhancer of GAL4 DNA binding). Chain B, Ribosomal 80s-Eef2Sordarin Complex, 1S1H_B (25) 90 ENO1 46.66 6.04 436 105 36 gi|157830958 1ELS_A (NP_011770) Cytoplasm Chain A, Enolase-Mn2+Phosphonoacetohydrox amate (-) gi|20151217 1L8P_A (NP_011770) Cytoplasm Chain A, MgPhosphonoacetohydrox amate Complex Of S39a Yeast Enolase 1 Ups3p, NP_010471 (27) 91 ENO1 46.68 6.17 436 67 31 123 124 Spot No 97 26 Gene name ENO2 ENO2 Mass [kDa] 46.94 46.94 pI [pH] 5.67 5.67 Sequence length [AA] 437 437 Score 100 56 Sequence Coverage [%] 36 25 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. YGR254W p-like protein, EDZ71898 (42) Cytoplasm Enolase II, a phosphopyruvate hydratase that catalyzes the conversion of 2phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis and the reverse reaction during gluconeogenesis; expression is induced in response to glucose. (-) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6321968 gi|6321968 NP_012044 NP_012044 Spot No 37 12 Gene name FBA1 FBA1 Mass [kDa] 39.88 39.88 pI [pH] 5.51 5.51 Sequence length [AA] 359 359 Score 130 92 Sequence Coverage [%] 40 30 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Fructose-1,6bisphosphate aldolase required for glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; catalyzes conversion of fructose-1, 6 bisphosphate to glyceraldehyde-3-P and dihydroxyacetone-P; locates to mitochondrial outer surface upon oxidative stress. Glo4p, NP_014683 (22) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Fructose 1,6bisphosphate aldolase required for glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; catalyzes conversion of fructose 1,6 bisphosphate to glyceraldehyde-3-P and dihydroxyacetone-P; locates to mitochondrial outer surface upon oxidative stress. Hsp26p, NP_009628 (68) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6322790 gi|6322790 NP_012863 NP_012863 125 126 Spot No 150 14 Gene name FPR1 HSP26 Mass [kDa] 12.08 23.87 pI [pH] 5.71 5.31 Sequence length [AA] 113 214 Score 66 121 Sequence Coverage [%] 45 52 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Chain A, Improved Calcineurin Inhibition By Yeast Fkbp12-Drug Complexes. Crystallographic And Functional Analysis Fpr1p, NP_014264 (66) Cytoplasm Nucleus Small heat shock protein (sHSP) with chaperone activity; forms hollow, sphere-shaped oligomers that suppress unfolded proteins aggregation; oligomer activation requires a heat-induced conformational change; not expressed in unstressed cells. Cog7p, NP_011510 (40) (BLAST Accession No) gi|157834293 gi|6319546 1YAT_A (NP_014264) NP_009628 Spot No 15 13 Gene name HSP26 HSP26 Mass [kDa] 23.87 23.87 pI [pH] 5.31 5.31 Sequence length [AA] 214 214 Score 119 70 Sequence Coverage [%] 57 42 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm Nucleus Small heat shock protein (sHSP) with chaperone activity; forms hollow, sphere-shaped oligomers that suppress unfolded proteins aggregation; oligomer activation requires a heat-induced conformational change; not expressed in unstressed cells. YLR301W, NP_013404 (39) Cytoplasm Nucleus Small heat shock protein (sHSP) with chaperone activity; forms hollow, sphere-shaped oligomers that suppress unfolded proteins aggregation; oligomer activation requires a heat-induced conformational change; not expressed in unstressed cells. PLC1, CAA98003 (20) (BLAST Accession No) gi|6319546 gi|6319546 NP_009628 NP_009628 127 128 Spot No 87 2 Gene name PGK1 RIB3 147 RPS21 A Mass [kDa] 44.77 22.90 9.80 pI [pH] 7.11 5.46 5.76 Sequence length [AA] 416 208 87 Score 142 83 63 Sequence Coverage [%] 44 51 80 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Cytoplasm 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, catalyzes transfer of high-energy phosphoryl groups from the acyl phosphate of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate to ADP to produce ATP; key enzyme in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. (-) Cytoplasm Mitochondrial intermembrane space 3,4-dihydroxy-2butanone-4-phosphate synthase (DHBP synthase), required for riboflavin biosynthesis from ribulose-5phosphate, also has an unrelated function in mitochondrial respiration. Vacuolar H+ATPase, AAA66890 (38) Cytoplasm Protein component of the small (40S) ribosomal subunit; nearly identical to Rps21Bp and has similarity to rat S21 ribosomal protein. (-) (BLAST Accession No) gi|10383781 gi|6320695 gi|6322910 NP_009938 NP_010775 NP_012983 Spot No 16 7 137 Gene name SEC53 SOD1 SSA1 Mass [kDa] 29.22 15.85 69.79 pI [pH] 5.14 5.48 5.00 Sequence length [AA] 254 153 642 Score 66 64 94 Sequence Coverage [%] 40 45 24 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) Hsp26p, NP_009628 (43) (BLAST Accession No) gi|14318474 NP_116609 Cytoplasm Phosphomannomutase involved in synthesis of GDP-mannose and dolichol-phosphatemannose; required for folding and glycosylation of secretory proteins in the ER lumen. gi|6730103 1B4T_A (NP_012638) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion intermembrane space Chain A, Cu (Ii) Zn superoxide dismutase (-) Cytoplasm Cell wall Nucleus ATPase involved in protein folding and nuclear localization signal (NLS)-directed nuclear transport; member of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family; forms a chaperone complex with Ydj1p. AWRI1631 _152250, EDZ69338 (26) gi|144228166 NP_009396 129 130 Spot No 51 138 3 Gene name SSA1 SSA2 TPI1 149 TSA1 Mass [kDa] 37.59 59.81 26.76 21.69 pI [pH] 5.24 7.00 5.75 5.03 Sequence length [AA] 339 543 247 196 Score 61 96 98 63 Sequence Coverage [%] 31 27 32 40 GI No Accession No [SwissProtKB/S wiss-Prot/ S.cerevisiae] Subcellular localization Description Next match, GI no (score) 70kDa heat shock protein YLL024Cplike protein, partial, EDZ70769 (52) (BLAST Accession No) gi|172713 AAA35095 (NP_009396) Cytoplasm Cell wall gi|207343245 EDZ70769 (NP_013076) Cytoplasm Cell wall YLL024Cp-like protein AWRI1631 _152250, EDZ69338 (25) 1YPI_A (NP_010335) Cytoplasm Mitochondrion Plasma membrane Chain A, Triosephosphate Isomerase YER186Cp -like protein, EDZ72486 (37) Cytoplasm Ubiquitous housekeeping thioredoxin peroxidase, reduces reactive oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur species using thioredoxin as hydrogen donor; mediates redox regulation of the nuclear localization of Yap1p; deletion results in mutator phenotype. YML028Wp -like protein, partial, EDZ70249 (40) gi|230405 gi|6323613 NP_013684 4. Discussion In this thesis, 2D-DIGE was used to search for proteins whose abundance differed between growth of S. cerevisiae on glucose or glycerol. The specific goal was to search for changes among enzymes associated with the metabolism of these substrates. The general background concerns the relationship between change in enzyme amount and metabolic output. One qualification is that 2DE generally detects only high abundance soluble and cytoskeletal proteins, although many of the enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism are detected using mammalian samples and appear to be relatively abundant proteins (Beddek et al., 2008; Rawson et al., 2012). At the time my research started there were no other proteomic comparisons of growth on glycerol versus glucose. 4.1. ProteinsidentifiedbyMALDIMS In this study 179 protein spots were identified from Coomassie stained gels of 100 μg protein from cells grown on 2% glucose. Typically, about 150-200 proteins can be identified by MALDI MS off the 7 cm gels used in my work (Beddek et al., 2008; Rawson et al., 2012). MS of protein spots excised from 2DE gels often results in identification of fewer proteins compared to shotgun LC MS/MS of digested cellular extracts, but comparison of abundances of individual proteins is well-established using 2D-DIGE. The major GO categories of identified proteins were: protein folding, sorting and degradation, transcription, translation, and carbohydrate, amino acid, nucleotide and energy metabolism. The largest group of functionally categorized proteins were involved in carbohydrate metabolism including the sub groups glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis, and fructose and mannose metabolism. Proteins associated with oxidative phosphorylation and methane metabolism identified in the GO analysis (Figure 15) included seven subunits of the F- and Vtype ATPases (Table 12). Proteins implicated in methane metabolism included the conversion of serine to glycine (Shm1 and Shm2), and glucose and fructose metabolism enzymes (Eno1, Eno2, Fba1, Gpm1 and Pfk2). 131 Table 12 - Components of complex V of the electron transport chain. Protein name Gene name Description Gel A (Figure 13) or B (Figure 14) [spot number] ATP synthase subunit α ATP1 α subunit of F-type H+ transporting ATPase B [122] ATP synthase subunit β ATP2 β subunit of F-type H+transporting ATPase A [81] ATP synthase subunit γ ATP3 γ subunit of F-type H+transporting ATPase B [81] Vacuolar membrane ATPase subunit B VMA2 Subunit B of V-type H+ transporting ATPase A [89 & 154] Vacuolar membrane ATPase subunit E VMA4 Subunit E of V-type H+ transporting ATPase A [124] Vacuolar membrane ATPase subunit AC39 VMA6 Subunit AC39 of V-type H+transporting ATPase A [135] Vacuolar membrane ATPase subunit F VMA7 Subunit F of V-type H+transporting ATPase A [101] Proteins involved in cysteine and methionine metabolism were Aat2, Aro8, Cys3, Hom2, Sah1, Sam1 and Spe3. Nucleotide metabolism included seven proteins involved in purine processing, Ade13, Adk1, Cdc19, Gua1, Imd2, Imd4 and Ynk1 Ten proteins were involved in protein processing in the endoplasmic reticulum, including Cdc48, Hsc82, Hsp26, Hsp82 and Sse1. Three proteins were components of the ubiquitin ligase complex (Ssa1, Ssa2 and Ssb1). Kar2, a part of a chaperone complex is associated with protein recognition and Pdi1 involved in protein targeting were also identified. GO analysis indicated proteins associated with phagosomes including actin (Act1) and tubulins, although these high abundance cytoskeletal proteins have widespread functions. Act1 is involved in the initial internalisation and formation of phagosomes (phagocytic cup). Tubulin is involved in phagosome maturation (Tub1 132 and Tub2). Four proteins Vma2, Vma4, Vma6 and Vma7 are a part of the vATPase (early, mature and phagolysosome stages). A large number of ribosomal proteins were identified. Ribosomes are organelles which have a significant role in protein synthesis. They are composed of large and small subunits. Three proteins associated with the large subunit were identified (Rpl11A, Rpl12B and Rpl13A). Twelve proteins associated with the small subunit were identified (Rps0A, Rps12, Rps15, Rps19B, Rps20, Rps21A, Rps22A, Rps27A, Rps3, Rps4B, Rps5 and Rps7A). 4.2. Carbohydrateandethanolmetabolism The primary aim of this study was to examine the differences in abundance of enzymes involved in carbohydrate and ethanol metabolism between growth on glucose or glycerol. The major categories of proteins detected were involved in glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis and mannose metabolism. Proteins associated with the following subgroups were also identified: citric acid cycle, pentose phosphate pathway, galactose, starch and sucrose, amino sugar and nucleotide sugar, pyruvate, glyoxylate and dicarboxylate, propanoate, butanoate and inositol phosphate metabolism. Most of the enzymes of the glycolytic pathway were identified except for Pgi1 that converts glucose-6-phosphate to fructose-6-phosphate (Figure 21). This protein has, however, been identified by several groups including Shevchenko et al. (1996) and Kolkman et al. (2005), using 2DE. Glycolytic enzymes that were detected included glucokinase Glk1, hexokinase Hxk2, phosphofructokinase Pfk2, fructosebisphosphate aldolase Fba1, and triosephosphate isomerase Tpi1. Although many glycolytic enzymes have been reported in previous proteomic studies, my research seems to be the first detection of phosphofructokinase that has important regulatory properties but seems to be low abundance and not previously identified by 2DE. As expected, for cells grown on glucose, enzymes required for ethanol synthesis were identified (Pdc1 and Adh1). An acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (Ald6) that catalyzes the conversion of aldehyde to acetate (Bruckmann et al., 2009; Huang et al., 2012; Kolkman et al., 2005; Massoni et al., 2009; Shevchenko et al., 1996) was also detected. Proteins associated with metabolism of mannose included mannose-6-phosphate 133 isomerase Pmi40, mannose-1-phosphate guanyltransferase Psa1, and phosphomannomutase Sec53. 4.3. Effectofgrowthonglucoseorglycerol Two-dimensional-differential in gel electrophoresis detected proteins that changed in abundance between glucose or glycerol supplementation. Of the approximately 2500 possible protein features (spots) analyzed on the 3-11 DIGE gels, 219 showed ≥ 2-fold (p ≤ 0.01) change between carbon substrates but many were minor spots on the gels. Only eight proteins were directly identified by MS of spots excised from the 2DDIGE gels, all were greater abundance from cells grown on glucose. Mass spectrometry of tryptic digests of proteins excised from DIGE gels is generally challenging because of the small amounts of proteins on these gels, and potentially also due to modification of some lysine residues by the DIGE reagents. An additional 18 proteins that varied between cells grown on glucose or glycerol could be matched with reasonable certainty to the database of proteins that was derived using 100 µg of protein from cells grown on 2% glucose (Table 5 and Table 6). GO analysis of the combined set of 26 proteins (Table 13) suggested that carbon substrate affected carbohydrate metabolism and other processes. Five of the enzymes required for conversion of glucose to ethanol (Pfk2, Fba1, Tpi1, Eno2 and Pdc1) increased approximately 3-9 fold in cells grown on glucose compared to glycerol (Table 13 and Figure 20). The greatest change was for phosphofructokinase (8.8 fold). This result is consistent with that of Foy & Bhattacharjee (1978) who reported doubling of phosphofructokinase enzyme activity during fermenation compared to oxidative conditions. The final two steps of ethanol synthesis for conversion of pyruvate to acetaldehyde and ethanol are catalyzed by Pdc1 and Adh1 respectively. Pyruvate decarboxylase Pdc1 increased approximately 5-fold during metabolism of glucose but there was not a statistically significant change in the amount of the major ethanol synthesising isoform of alcohol dehydrogenase Adh1. There may have been less than 2-fold changes in enzyme amount that would not have been statistically significant using four biological replicates (Karp & Lilley, 2005) but the effects of small, or any, change in enzyme amount on metabolic output remains to be determined. 134 Several proteins were associated with protein synthesis and processing. Further functional analysis of each protein was obtained from the ExPASy database www.expasy.ch. Rps0A, Rps12, Tif2 and Tif6 have roles as part of the ribosome, RNA transport, and ribosome biogenesis. Rps0A and Rps12 are a part of the small subunit of the ribosome. Tif2 has a role in RNA transport while Tif6 is involved in ribosome biosynthesis. Egd2 is also involved in protein synthesis. The transcriptional protein Ssa1 is a part of splicesosomes. Proteins involved in folding, sorting and degradation were identified (Ssa1, Sse1, Ssc1). Ssa1 is a heat shock protein which plays a role in protein folding and is also a component of ER-associated degradation. Sse1 is a subunit if the ubiquitin ligase complex were the proteins which represent processing ER. Ssc1 is a mitochondrial heat shock protein. Other proteins that showed changes in abundance between substrates included an actin binding protein Abp1, the 14-3-3 family proteins Bmh1 and Bmh2, two peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerases Cpr1 and Fpr1 that are associated with protein folding, GMP synthase Gua1, superoxide dismutase (Sod1), the nuclear pore complex protein Srp1 that is implicated in transport of proteins between nucleus and cytoplasm, and Zeo1 that has been associated with cell stress. Overall these changes suggest potential effects on protein synthesis and processing that may be associated with the experimental design when cells from glycerol cultures were transferred to either glucose or glycerol media. To investigate this potential “stress response” the design could be changed to compare the shift of cells grown in glucose to glycerol. Another approach would be to examine cells grown in either glucose or glycerol for two to three generations prior to proteomic analysis. The identification of proteins from cells grown on glucose should also be extended to MS of proteins from cells grown on glycerol to facilitate analysis of proteins that increase in abundance during metabolism of glycerol, including potentially the glycerol metabolising enzymes Gut1 and 2 that were not identified in the current study. 135 Matched proteins Identified proteins Table 13 - The twenty-six varying proteins associated with growth on glucose. Eight proteins were detected by DeCyderTM analysis (≥ 2-fold, p ≤ 0.01) and identified by MS (Table 9) of (30 μg) proteins extracted from cells grown in 2% glucose or 3% glycerol. The other 18 were matched to spots on the reference gels (Table 10), 100 μg proteins extracted from cells grown in 2% glucose. Average ratio and t-test values are associated with DeCyderTM data. 136 Master No (Spot No) Possible matches Average ratio t-test Protein name (glycolytic enzymes are in bold) Gene name 1891 (16) N/A 2.04 0.008 Phosphomannomutase SEC53 1576 (37) N/A 3 0.0037 Fructose-1,6bisphosphate aldolase FBA1 1069 (137/138) N/A 3.3 0.0046 Stress-seventy subfamily A SSA1/2 2051 (7) N/A 4.1 0.0012 Superoxide dismutase SOD1 1916 (17) N/A 4.28 0.0046 Enhancer of Gal4 DNA binding EGD2 2194 (33) N/A 6.04 0.0045 Cyclosporin Asensitive proline rotamase CPR1 1455 (97) N/A 6.55 0.00021 Enolase ENO2 2155 (150) N/A 7.2 4.10E-05 Fk 506-senstive proline rotamase FPR1 846 177 5.56 0.0021 Actin-binding protein ABP1 1762 128 7.1 0.00021 Brain modulosignalin homologue 1 BMH1 1713 127 5.88 0.00014 Brain modulosignalin homologue 2 BMH2 1408 77 2.31 0.0084 Glutamate dehydrogenase GDH1 1267 24 2.58 0.0015 Guanine Auxotroph GUA1 1216 217 4.65 0.0045 Pyruvate decarboxylase PDC1 683 200 8.76 0.00021 Phosphofructokinase PFK2 1538 30 2.76 0.0079 GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase PSA1 1843 139 7.35 0.00021 Ribosomal protein of RPS0A the small subunit 2042 104 12.22 5.60E-05 Ribosomal protein of the small subunit RPS12 1231 93 3.81 0.0029 Supressor of Rpb1 SRP1 1047 189 3.57 0.01 Stress-seventy subfamily C SSC1 863 191 3.68 0.0025 Stress-seventy subfamily E SSE1 1484 147 5.18 0.0017 Translation initiation factor 2 TIF2 1923 131 20.5 1.60E-05 Translation initiation factor 6 TIF6 1900 45 6.37 0.0019 Triosephosphate isomerase TPI1 1027 20 3.61 0.01 Arginyl-tRNA synthetase YDR341C 2101 99 16.3 1.60E-05 Zeocin resistance ZEO1 137 Figure 21 - Proteins involved in glucose and glycerol metabolism. Identified proteins (red box) from cells grown on 2% glucose were excised from gels containing 100 μg protein (Figure 13 and Figure 14). Proteins detected in the 2D-DIGE experiment were labeled with D+ (glucose-based media) or G+ (glycerol-based media) (Table 13). Thirty micrograms of protein was used in the glucose versus glycerol 2D-DIGE experiment. 138 4.4. Changesassociatedwithcarbohydratemetabolism Metabolic differences between S. cerevisiae during fermentation or oxidation of carbon substrates are well described including the proteomic studies surveyed in the Introduction. One aspect of this study was identification of Pfk2 that is rarely reported, if at all, using 2DE of mammalian or yeast cells. The identification of 26 proteins that changed between glucose or glycerol based media included seven that were involved in carbohydrate metabolism. All seven increased in abundance in cells grown on glucose. My results are most comparable with those of Stobaugh et al. (2013) who used shotgun MS to examine protein change between shake flask cultures of S. cerevisiae. Although protein fractionation methods affected the results (see Introduction Figure 6) their combined results indicated that growth on glucose gave increased abundance of a hexokinase, triosephosphate isomerase and pyruvate decarboxylases, but there was not a significant increase in the detected Adh1 in this research. Also like my results, pyruvate decarboxylase Pdc1 increased with glucose compared to glycerol but they also found relative increase in Pdc5 and 6 for cells grown in glycerol. Other changes reported by Stobaugh et al. (2013) included increases in the final enzyme of the glycerol synthesis pathway. They detected phosphofructokinase and enolase but without significant change in abundance between grown on glucose and glycerol. Although proteomic methodology affects both detection and quantification of proteins, 2D-DIGE is a relatively robust method for comparison of protein abundances. Similarly, Guidi et al. (2010) showed altered abundances of protein for several glycolytic enzymes between high (2%) glucose (fermentation) and low (0.5%) glucose conditions. They found greater abundance of five glycolytic proteins were associated with high glucose conditions including Eno2 and Pdc1, proteins which were detected in this study with growth on glucose. They also detected glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase isozyme 3 Tdh3, phosphoglycerate kinase Pgk1, and Adh1. Therefore, the detection of these glycolytic enzymes, particularly Pdc1 and Adh1 would reasonably suggest greater abundance of enzymes involved in ethanol synthesis in high (2%) glucose conditions. 139 Gutteridge et al. (2010) reported an altered abundance of transcripts and proteins involved in the early stages of glucose metabolism in carbon limited conditions. They identified high glucose affinity transporters Hxt6/7 (glucose-limited conditions) and Hxk1 and Glk1 (linked with carbon sources other than glucose). Although their results are not directly comparable as conditions varied (chemostat cultures and supplemented with 0.25% glucose), they do provide an insight into other proteins likely to have changed with growth on glycerol. 4.5. Conclusionsandfuturedirections The present study has given insight into the proteomic differences between growth on glucose or glycerol. Future studies could include the refinement of proteomics methods and modification of growth conditions. Changes in the proteomic workflow could include use of larger 2D gels to allow detection and identification of more proteins, or use of quantitative shotgun methods such as SILAC or iTRAQ. It is more likely that low abundance proteins would be detected using shotgun analysis. Use of larger numbers of biological replicates, for example n = 10, would give statistically significant detection of smaller changes in protein amount (Karp & Lilley, 2005). The growth conditions used showed a potential stress response affecting protein processing in cells shifted from glycerol to glucose. It would be interesting to find out if the transition from cells grown on glucose to glycerol gave a similar response. Subsequent research should investigate the in vivo consequences of change in enzyme amount, this potentially could be done using specific enzyme inhibitors or gene manipulation which is well established for S. cerevisiae. Future studies could therefore combine manipulation of enzyme amounts with proteomic and metabolite analysis. 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